No, amoebas and trout are not in the same genus. Amoebas belong to the protists, primarily classified in the genus Amoeba, while trout are fish and belong to the genus Oncorhynchus or Salmo, depending on the species. These two organisms are from entirely different biological classifications and are not closely related.
Trout are of the Family Salmonidae, Order Salmoniformes. True trout are any species of the Genus Salmo
A group of closely related species would share the same genus.
Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Amoebozoa Phylum: Tubulinea Order: Tubulinida Family: Amoebidae Genus: Amoeba
The scientific name of the amoeba is... Amoeba. Amoebas belong to the genus Amoeba. You have distinct species like Amoeba proteus and Amoeba dubia.
The amoebas are in the protista kingdom.
Trout are of the Family Salmonidae, Order Salmoniformes. True trout are any species of the Genus Salmo
It depends on which species you are talking about but they are of the Salmonidae family. Brown trout, sea troout, etc. have a differemt genus than others. They are of the Salmogenus with Atlantic Salmon. Rainbow Trout are of the Oncorhynchus genus. Brook Trout are found in the Char family or Salvelinus genus. Brook trout are my fav! Beautiful ain't they?:)
No. They are two different fish. They live in closely the same habitats.
An adder's tongue is any of several fern-like plants in the genus Ophioglossum, or a lily in the genus Erythonium, otherwise known as the trout lily.
None of those. Its not an animal; its a one-celled organism. Amoebas make up the kingdom Amoebozoa although if I read correctly, true amoebas may only be those of the genus Amoeba.
Sarcodina is a group of protozoans that do not belong to a single genus. It is a former phylum within the Kingdom Protista that includes amoebas and similar organisms that move and feed by means of pseudopods. Each species within Sarcodina belongs to its own specific genus.
No; if they belong to the same genus then they have to belong to the same family.
No; if they belong to the same genus then they have to belong to the same family.
No; if they belong to the same genus then they have to belong to the same family.
They have the same genus - "URSUS". *1st part of scientific name is the genus, 2nd is the species
A group of closely related species would share the same genus.
Salmon and trout are in the same family..Salmon generally get larger, but some trout grow nearly as large.