Not sure if that's the right answer, but this is the scientific name for Seaweed
things are given scientific names by their charactertics and it is important because scientist can talk about same species without Any confusion
Seaweed is a broad colloquial term that refers to multiple types of algae.
Medicines typically have two types of scientific names: generic names and brand names. The generic name is the official scientific name of the drug based on its chemical structure. The brand name is the name given to the drug by the pharmaceutical company for marketing purposes.
Alexander is the proper name for the nickname Alex.
The two names given to a species are its genus name and its specific epithet, which together form its scientific name or binomial name.
The leaf of the plant has the same scientific name as the plant itself. Scientific names are given to organisms as a whole, so leaves, stems, varying appendages in animals, etc., do not have different scientific names than the organism as a whole.
Only Latin for the binomial scientific name, but in colloquial names some parts are taken from Greek as well.
A non-living thing does not have a scientific name because scientific names are used to classify and describe living organisms based on their characteristics and relationships. Scientific names are given to species, genera, families, and other taxonomic categories within the living world.
Seaweeds troop
Seaweeds troop
there are lots of seaweeds ..... some of them are used as food. there are sea lettuce, Ulva sp. or the hairy green seaweed, seagrasses, green seaweeds that look like grapes, and different feathery green seaweeds and feathery green seaweeds and seagrasses, green seaweeds that look like grapes, and different feathery green seaweeds and feathery green seaweeds and seagrasses, brown seaweeds and red seaweeds, Ornate leaf slug (Elysia ornata) and a tiny hairy Bryopsis slug that is still awaiting identification and is often seen on the Hairy green seaweed (Bryopsis sp.) and the tiny Halimeda slug (Pusilla sp.) often seen on Big coin green seaweed (Halimeda sp.)See related link
Scientific names are exact. They tell us the genus and species that the animal or plant belongs to and only one scientific name is given to each species. Common names, on the other hand, are abundant with many species having two or more common names. Let's look at the cougar as an example. Its scientific name is Puma concolor. It's common names include cougar, Florida panther, panther, puma, catamount and mountain lion. A puma is neither a panther nor a lion. It is in a genus that it shares with the jaguarundi so you can see where confusion would come in.