2nd level of clasification is phylum
Answared by
Ahsan liaquat ali channa
species
The next-higher level is the domain. The next-lower level is the phylum; for plants, this is traditionally called division.
Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species
The second broadest level of taxonomic classification is the phylum. It is one level below kingdom, and organisms within the same phylum share similar characteristics and evolutionary histories.
The kingdom Protista was divided to create the six kingdom model classification. This division was made to provide a more organized and accurate classification system for organisms that did not fit well into the existing kingdoms of animals, plants, and fungi.
The largest level of classification in a kingdom is the phylum.
A kingdom is a broader classification level compared to a family. Kingdom is one of the higher taxonomic ranks in biological classification, whereas family is a lower rank that falls under kingdom.
If kingdom is an option it's kingdom. If not then the answer is phylum
Domain is the broadest level of classification in the new system, higher than kingdom in the old classification system.
The classification level that comes after domain is kingdom. The hierarchy for classification in biology is domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species.
kingdom
The highest level is kingdom. Humans belong to the animal kingdom.
The level of classification with the most number of species is the kingdom.
Domain is the highest level of biological classification, which is above kingdom. The three domains are Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
No, the highest level is kingdom.
The Order would have the smallest level of classification out of the options provided (kingdom, phylum, order). Order is a classification level under phylum and would have fewer groups of organisms compared to phylum or kingdom.
No, in biological classification, Kingdom is a higher level of classification than Domain. Domains represent the highest level of biological classification, which can be further divided into kingdoms.