class, kingdom, order, and phylum
class
A scientific name must have the Genus then the species. The genus is always capitalized and the species is lower case. If it is typed it must be italicized and if it is written it must be underlined.Example: Homo sapiens
The first letter of every species stands for the genus name of the species. The genus name must always be capitalized, and the entire name must be underlined or in italics.
The Genus name of the organism must be written first with an underline or is italicized, the first letter of the name must be CAPITALIZED. The Species name of the organism comes second, must also be written with an underline or italicization and can't have any capitalization.
Organisms that belong to the same class are of the same species. They will be able to reproduce without a problem.
Naming species is known in the scientific world as binomial nomenclature. Each name must be made up of two words: one is the modern Latin or scientific term for the genus and the second is the identifying word for the particular species. In the species Homo sapiens, Homo is the genus and sapiens is the specific species within that genus.Although the taxonomist or scientist can give a new species nearly any name he likes, he does have to follow certain rules when composing the name. For instance, the name must follow Latin grammar rules. The descriptor name must be in the possessive form.
No; if they belong to the same genus then they have to belong to the same family.
It must include the genus and species. In some cases it should also include a subspecies.
Phylum. Organisms in the same class belong to the same phylum, which is a higher taxonomic rank that groups organisms based on shared characteristics.
The first letter of every species stands for the genus name of the species. The genus name must always be capitalized, and the entire name must be underlined or in italics.
Unlike the species name, the genus name of an organism can stand its own. When it is written alone, it must start with a capital letter and must be underlined if handwritten or italicized if typed.ExamplesPlasmodium vivax (genus and species, must be underlined/italicized)Plasmodium (genus name only, must be underlined/italicized)P.vivax (genus shortened with species name, must be underline/italicized)vivax (should never be written, practically meaningless)
A scientific name must have the Genus then the species. The genus is always capitalized and the species is lower case. If it is typed it must be italicized and if it is written it must be underlined.Example: Homo sapiens
The first letter of every species stands for the genus name of the species. The genus name must always be capitalized, and the entire name must be underlined or in italics.
The two parts in scientific names are the genus and the specific epithet or species name.The genus and species are the last two classification in the Linnaeus hierarchy.There are certain rules on writing and typing the scientific names.Some of them_:-The genus name can be written alone to designate all species on that genus.i.e:Zea-describes all tall annual grass with separate female and male flowers-The species name however cannot be written alone and must follow the full genus name.i.e:Zea mays or Z. mays (corn)-In printing,the scientific names must be in Italics.i.e:Homo sapiens-In writing,the scientific names must be underlined separately..
The rules that must be following in binomial nomenclature are: 1.genus comes before the species. 2.genus always capitalized and species are never capitalized. 3.genus and species are both underlined.
Panthera leoThe genus is always capitalized and the species is always lower-cased.Also the genus and species must either be underlined or italicized when written.
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.
Pasers amicus(remember that it must be italicised) {Genus species}