they are closely related, similar or they are either both girls or both boys and they have had sex together more then 10 times so they share the same DNA.
No. If they do not belong to the same class, they can't be in the same order or family. The classification goes: Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
Same genus or closely related species.
plants does not have any particular genus
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.
Linnaeus developed two primary groups for classifying organisms: genus and species. The genus is a broader category that includes one or more species that are closely related, while the species is the specific group of organisms that can interbreed and produce fertile offspring. This binomial nomenclature system provides a standardized way to name and categorize living organisms.
Two organisms belonging to the same genus always belong to the same family.
When using genus and species in taxonomy , the genus will be the same for two very closely related organisms. The species will separate them.
Not necessarily, there can be many similarities and differences within a genus
No. If they do not belong to the same class, they can't be in the same order or family. The classification goes: Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
genus
Same genus or closely related species.
plants does not have any particular genus
The classification of organisms from general to specific goes: Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species. Therefor, two species the same Genus MUST be members of the same Family. However, a Family may consist of several different Genus, so species in the same Family are not necessarily members of the same Genus.
In the classification of organisms, family is a higher taxonomic rank than genus, and genus is a higher rank than species. Organisms that belong to the same genus are more closely related than those in the same family, and organisms in the same species are the most closely related.
Genus. Organisms that are in the same phylum and family may belong to different genera because the family level is more inclusive than the genus level of classification.
no
If two organisms have the same genus within their scientific names, they would share the first part of the binomial nomenclature. For example, if the scientific names are Homo sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis, both share the genus name Homo, indicating they belong to the same genus.