If we are thinking in the same terms; Any living thing must
1)respond to it's environment
2)Produce waste
3)Reproduce
4)Require energy
5)Be composed of cells
6)And something else, but every little bit helps I guess :)
Are you talking the 7 basic levels of classical biological classification? Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Of these, species is the most specific. There are sub-species as well. This is not the only current classification system.
formal, material, and final
In year 7 the expected levles are level 5 and over.
primates For full classification of Monkeys, see Related links below this box.
kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Vertebrata Class: Mammalia Order: Lagomorpha Family: Leporidae Genus: Oryctolagus Species: Cuniculus
7 levels of classification from broadest to most specific level
Whaat are the seven levels of classification for a mountain zebra
No, since Aristotle, the greek philosopher, only created 7 classification levels, so we stick with that.
sampaghuita
7 Classification levels of a dragonflyKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: InsectaOrder: OdonataFamily: LibellulidaeGenus: LibellulaSpecies: flavidaBy: Logan G.
7
The domain is Eukara, and the kingdom is Protista.
Cavia porcellus I think.
The 7 levels classification for bats are: Kingdom - Animalia, Phylum - Chordata, Class - Mammalia, Order - Chiroptera, Family - Vespertilionidae (most common family for bats), Genus, and Species.
kingdom:lucidae Phylum:Gymosperms Class:Demoascarsis Order:genusglum
kingdom:plantaephylum:magnoliophytaclass:lilliopsideorder:lilialesfamily:liliaceagenus:tulipaspecies:darwin Emma rock
what humans have in comman with dogs are nucleus, both mammals, scintific names and both reproduce etc.