mammal
mammilia
That refers to mammals.
The kingdom is Mammilia, the Phylum is Chordata.
Animal kingdom. Answer: Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammilia Order: Artiodactyla Suborder: Ruminantia Family: Cervidae
Mammalia is more specific than Animalia. Mammalia is a subphylum within the animal kingdom that includes animals that are warm-blooded, have hair or fur, and produce milk for their young. Animalia, on the other hand, is a broader classification that includes all animals, including mammals, birds, fish, insects, and more.
The coyote belongs in the dog family also known as canids, which also include wolves, foxes, jackals, dingos, and dogs(the ones we keep as pets), the class of mammilia,and the order of carnivora.
Horse classifiation is as follows: Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammilia Order: Perissodactyla Family: Equidae Species: Equus caballus This classification includes:horses, asses, zebras and 9 other species.
Baboons belong to the Kingdom Animalia, the Phylum Chordata, Class Mammilia, the ORDER Primates, the Family Cercopithecidea, and the Genus Papio. I am taking biology this year and had this question on a test. Good luck to who ever need this. Ps. Biology is not as bad as everybody makes it out to be! :)
The gray wolf is classified as Canis lupus. The Eurasian wolf is Canis lupus lupus. There are many other wolf subspecies, including the domestic dog, Canis lupus familiaris. Please refer to the related link to a Wikipedia article on the subspecies of wolves.
Pigs belong to the genus sus, the subfamily suinae, and the phylum chordata. Pigs also belong to the subclass theria, the eutheria infraclass, the artiodactyla order, and the Animalia kingdom.
Scientists group all living things into categories based on their similarities and differences in characteristics such as physical appearance, genetic makeup, and evolutionary history. This classification system organizes living organisms into a hierarchy, with broad categories like kingdoms and narrower categories like species. The most widely used classification system today is the one developed by Carl Linnaeus, which groups organisms based on shared characteristics and evolutionary relationships.