Rabbits belong to the Animalia kingdom, the chordata phylum, and the vertebrata subphylum. Rabbits also belong to the pentalagus genus.
It depends on the rabbit. The various genera that rabbits fall into are as follows:PentalagusBunolagusNesolagusRomerolagusBrachylagusSylvilagusOryctolagusPoelagus
Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.Latrodectus is the genus of the Black Widow Spider.
There is a slight difference between rabbits and hares. They both belong to the 'Leporidae' family and 'Lagomorpha' Order. However, hares do not bear young in burrows or underground, they bear their young in a shallow depression that is called a 'form'. For more information, please access the related link(s) listed below:
The genus and species for jaguar is Panthera onca.
There are many genus' that are considered slugs. The phylum is mollusca.
It depends on the rabbit. The various genera that rabbits fall into are as follows:PentalagusBunolagusNesolagusRomerolagusBrachylagusSylvilagusOryctolagusPoelagus
Holland Lop rabbits are the smallest and most popular of pet rabbits. The scientific genus for a Holland lop is Oryctolagus.
There are many different kinds of brown-haired rabbits and they don't all belong to the same genus. There are 11 genera in the Family Leporidae (this is the family that all hares and rabbits belong to), and most of the species in those genera are brown-haired. All pet rabbits, regardless of breed or coat colour, belong to the same species: they are European Rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) in the genus Oryctolagus.
Cottontail rabbits (genus Sylvilagus) are only found in the Americas. Rabbits in the Sahara are of the orderFamily: Leporidae (rabbits, hares) Genus: LepusCape hare Lepus capensisLR/lc
I'm just gonna guess yes.
There is no "vertebrate" name for any animal. Only the common name, genus name, class name, species type, and the scientific name. All rabbits are in the Lagomorpha class and all rabbits have their own scientific name.
Bunnies, or rabbits are Family: lagomorph, genus: LeporidaeKingdom: AnimaliaSuperphylum: ChordataPhylum: VertebrataClass: MammaliaOrder: LagomorphaFamily: Leporidae
Rabbits belong to the genus Sylvilagus and hares belong to the genus Lepus, both of which belong to the scientific family Lagomorph. Contrary to popular belief, rabbits are NOT rodents. As well, aside from minor adaptations due to living environments and selective breeding for specific traits like coloring and ear shape, there is very little difference scientifically between wild and domestic varieties of rabbits.
Rabbits belong to the genus Sylvilagus and hares belong to the genus Lepus, both of which belong to the scientific family Lagomorph. Contrary to popular belief, rabbits are NOT rodents. As well, aside from minor adaptations due to living environments and selective breeding for specific traits like coloring and ear shape, there is very little difference scientifically between wild and domestic varieties of rabbits.
There are many different species of cottontail rabbits. They all belong to the genus Sylvilagus:Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: MammaliaOrder: LagomorphaFamily: LeporidaeGenus: Sylvilagus
Absolutely not!! Genus is the second last taxonomic name which really narrows down the type of organisms that exist in that particular genus. ONLY BEARS belong to this genus, not other mammals like rabbits, cows, deer, moose, wolverines, sloths, tigers, elephants or any mammal for that matter.
Besides the common hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius), the only other animal in the same family is the pygmy hippopotamus (Choeropsis liberiensis or Hexaprotodon liberiensis). The common hippo is the only species in the genus Hippopotamus.