The order is (with an example for a human):
1.Domain (sometimes not included) eg. Eukarya
2.Kingdom eg. Animalia
3.Phylum eg. Chordata
4.Class eg. Mammalia
5.Order eg. Primates
6.Family eg. Hominidae
7.Genus eg. Homo
8.Species eg. H. sapiens
Occasionally, there is a rank below species.
9. Subspecies eg. H. s. sapiens
No, a kingdom is broader and includes multiple phyla. Kingdom is the highest taxonomic rank while phylum is a lower rank within the hierarchy.
Yes, phylum is more inclusive than family in biological classification. Phylum is a higher taxonomic rank that groups together organisms with similar body plans, while family is a lower rank that groups together organisms with similar characteristics within a particular phylum.
A phylum is a group of animals that are directly drawn from a kingdom. A sub-phylum is a phylum that is slightly more accurate for a group of animals but is not a class.
No, sponges are a completely different phylum group than arthropods.
Phylum (Chordata), as class is located at a lower taxonomic level than phylum for classification of organisms.
The phylum is Arthropods. As for the group, the answer is Beatles. Not the band, the bug.
its phylum! (probably)
The more than 8,000 species of diatoms are the largest group in the phylum Chrysophyta of the kingdom Protista.
Phylum
The group with the largest number of organisms is kingdom, followed by phylum, class, order, and family in the Linnaean classification system. The number of organisms typically decreases as you move from higher to lower taxonomic levels.
paramecium A+
The largest group within a kingdom is typically the phylum. A phylum is a taxonomic rank in biological classification that groups together organisms with similar body plans and characteristics. It is a higher rank than kingdom and includes multiple classes, orders, families, and genera within it.