Viruses have compromised scientific names. This means that they have names that are vague like influenza type A for example.
You can find names for viruses and bacteria in a medical health book. A good source is a book called Bacteria and Viruses by Leslie J. Lemaster.
All animals have only 1 official scientific name, that is one of the advantages to the scientific naming system.
Yes, a field guide typically includes both common names and scientific names of species to help readers easily identify and learn about the organisms being described. Common names can vary regionally, so including scientific names provides a universal reference point for accurate identification.
Its clitoris.
The two advantages of using scientific names for organisms include their universality in the whole world since they are Latin, and no single organism can have more than one scientific name.
because they are not yet clearly classified
Idk, but here r some related subjects: mirobes, germs, viruses, protists
They all have their own names, but as a group they are just viruses.
There are no real "Helpful Viruses". Viruses are viruses. They make things go wrong with your computer.
Many do, some are pending scientific names.
Scientific names are based on biological and evolutionary relationships.
Scientific names contain information about organisms.
Yes, all organisms have scientific names. Thus planarians have scientific names too.
There is no scientific evidence.
That IS the scientific name.
because there are so many different variations of scientific names.
Binomial nomenclature (scientific names) include a genus name followed by a species name. These names are generally Classical (Latin or Ancient Greek) terms.