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  1. The Animal kingdom can be further split into: Vertebrates - animals with a backbone. These include amphibians, mammals, reptiles, bony fish and birds. (Clockwise from top-left) A frog, a...

  2. While both share the common thread of being living organisms, they diverge significantly in their structure, functions, and lifestyles. Let’s delve into the intricacies of the similarities and differences that define these two kingdoms.

  3. Jump to. Key points. Classification attempts to impose a hierarchy on the complex and dynamic variety of life on Earth by describing how different species group together and how they are related to...

  4. The first division of living things in the classification system is to put them into one of five kingdoms. The five kingdoms are: animals (all multicellular animals) plants (all green plants ...

    • Domain
    • Kingdom
    • Phylum / Division
    • Class
    • Order
    • Family
    • Genus
    • Species

    Plural: Domains The domain is the top taxa in the biological classification system and sits above the kingdom taxa. There are three domains of life. They include Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. Bacteria and Archaea are buckets that hold two broad types of microorganisms (often single-celled) whose cells do not have membranes around the nucleus. Euk...

    Plural: Kingdoms The kingdom is the second taxa in the biological classification system. It sits below domain and above phylum. There are six kingdoms. Below the domain level, living organisms branch out into six kingdoms. These kingdoms reveal the basic different types of living things: animals, plants, fungi, protozoa (single-celled organisms), C...

    Plural: Phyla/ Divisions Phylum and division are the third taxa in the biological classification system. They sits below kingdom and above class. We use ‘phylum’ for animals and ‘divison’ for plants. There are 7 animal phyla and 12 plant divisions.

    Plural: Classes Class is the fourth taxa in the biological classification system. It sits below phylum and above order. The ‘class’ taxa is where things get interesting as we can start to see distinct clusters of recognizable lifeforms at this level. We’ll focus specifically on chordata (vertebrate animals) and Angiospermophyta (flowering plants) h...

    Plural: Orders Order is the fifth taxa in the biological classification system. It sits below class and above family. We break down classes into orders. Let’s take a look again at one example from animals and one from plants.

    Plural: Families Family is the sixth taxa in the biological classification system. It sits below order and above genus. Below orders are families. Families are groups of animals that are usually observably related to the casual observer. Here are some examples from the animal and plant kingdoms.

    Plural: Genera Genus is the seventh taxa in the biological classification system. It sits below family and above species. At the genus level, we’re getting specific enough that a species’ latin binomial name will contain the genus as the first word. For example, the wolf’s scientific binomial name is Canis lupis. Here, we can instantly tell that it...

    Plural: Species Species is the last taxa in the biological classification system. It sits below genus. The species is the exact animal or plant. This is the lowest level on the biological taxonomy. We can generally identify a species because all animals within the species share a fundamentally similar DNA sequence and are able to breed with one ano...

  5. Jan 7, 2024 · Even though members of the animal kingdom are incredibly diverse, animals share common features that distinguish them from organisms in other kingdoms. All animals are eukaryotic, multicellular organisms, and almost all animals have specialized tissues.

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  7. May 27, 2024 · Animal – A kingdom of complex multi-celled organisms that do not produce their own food. This kingdom contains all living and extinct animals. Examples include elephants, whales, and humans. Plants – Complex and multi-cellular autotrophic organisms, meaning they produce their own food through photosynthesis.

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