Answer:
Single-cell organisms
Explanation:
In 1735, Linnaeus introduced a classification system with only two kingdoms: animals and plants. Linnaeus published this system for naming, ranking, and classifying organisms in the book "Systema Naturae". In the epoch that Linnaeus created this system, single-cell organisms such as bacteria and protists were almost unknown. In 1866, E. Haeckel added a category including both bacteria and protozoa, thereby adding a category formed by single-cell organisms (different from animals and plants). During the 1900-1920 period, bacteria were classified as a separated kingdom named 'prokaryotes'. The current three-domain classification system was introduced by C. Woese in 1990. In this system, all forms of life are divided into three different domains: archaea, bacteria, and eukaryote domains (this last composed of protists, fungi, plants and animals).
B is the answer?!? Sorry if im wront
I believe the correct answer would be <span>variation. The definition of variation in biology means,</span><span> any difference
between cells, individual organisms, or groups of organisms of any
species caused either by genetic differences or by the effect of environmental factors on the expression of the genetic potentials. So i think that organisms can also be classified as variation. Hope this helped. ♥ ☺
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Answer:
Humans come under mammal kingdom in vertebrates.
Humans may be called "naked apes," but most of us wear clothing, a fact that makes us unique in the animal kingdom, save for the clothing we make for other animals. The development of clothing has even influenced the evolution of other species — the body louse, unlike all other kinds, clings to clothing, not hair.2
Answer:
I'm gonna say that they are both mammals
srry if this is not helpful