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30 September, 00:39

How does the Classification system distinguish between organisms?

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  1. 30 September, 04:20
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    By organising them into five major kingdoms and further dividing each kingdom into phyla (or divisions), classes, orders, families, genus, and species.

    Explanation:

    There are five kingdoms:

    Monera: bacteria Protista: amoeba, paramecium, euglena Fungi: yeast, rhizopus Plantae: flowering and non-flowering plants Animalia: animals (vertebrates and invertebrates)

    Organisms that share the most similar features are grouped into the same species. Species with similar features fall under the same genus. Several genus make up a family, several families make up an order, several orders make up a class, several classes make up a phylum (or division), and several phyla (or divisions) make up a kingdom.

    Note: there are three domains (or superkingdoms) : Archea, Bacteria, and Eukarya.
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