It depends on the usage. A lot of closely related species will belong to the same genus. For common usage however, i.e. to say Chimpanzees and Gorrilas are closely related would make them a family rather than the same genus.
There are a number of other phrases. The word clade is commonly used. A clade refers to animals sharing common ancestors. Using the example as before, Chimpanzees and Gorillas are close relatives where humans are considered vastly different (or not very in the grand scheme of taxonomy). They would however belong to the same clade, as would monkeys.
For very, very closely related species, the phrase Species Complex is often used. These are species that are very very similar, often to the point of appearing identical, but being sufficiently genetically different to fulfill the criteria for separate species, i.e. they won't mate, or if they do, their offspring are not completely viable. Common examples include fruitflies within the Drosophila melanogaster complex and mosquitoes in the Anopheles gambiae.
species
A group of closely related species would share the same genus.
Similar species are grouped in a taxonomic category called a genus. A genus is a group of closely related species that share common characteristics and are more closely related to each other than to species in other genera.
The members of a species are more closely associated compared to individuals of different species within a population. Members of a population are more closely related compared to individuals from different populations within the same species.
its called a phylum
a Class
A group of closely related classes in a kingdom is called a phylum. It is a taxonomic rank below kingdom and above class.
family
family
a population i think.
Species is a group of living things that are so closely related that they can breed with one another and produce offspring that can breed as well.
Agenus is a group of species composed ofmembers more closely related to each otherthan to species from any other genus.