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  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Thompson_Rivers_University/Principles_of_Biology_II_OL_ed/03%3A_Systematics_Phylogeny_and_Biological_Diversity/3.02%3A_Systematics_Phylogeny_and_Cladistics/3.2.01%3A_Systematics_and_Classification
    Scientists continually obtain new information that helps to understand the evolutionary history of life on Earth. Part of this information includes relationships between organisms. While phylogeny rep...Scientists continually obtain new information that helps to understand the evolutionary history of life on Earth. Part of this information includes relationships between organisms. While phylogeny represents the full understanding of evolutionary relationships, scientists also classify organisms into groups to use a common framework of language for all species known as binomial nomenclature.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Workbench/Bio_1130%3A_Remixed/06%3A_Phylogenetic_Trees/6.03%3A_The_Levels_of_Classification
    Carnivora is the name of the taxon at the order level; Canidae is the taxon at the family level, and so forth. For example, despite the fact that a hippopotamus resembles a pig more than a whale, the ...Carnivora is the name of the taxon at the order level; Canidae is the taxon at the family level, and so forth. For example, despite the fact that a hippopotamus resembles a pig more than a whale, the hippopotamus may be the closest living relative to the whale. The most general category in taxonomic classification is domain, which is the point of origin for all species; all species belong to one of these domains: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
  • https://bio.libretexts.org/Workbench/General_Biology_I_and_II/04%3A_Unit_IV-_Evolutionary_Processes/4.3%3A_Systematics_Phylogeny_and_Comparative_Biology/4.4.1%3A_Systematics_and_Classification
    Scientists continually obtain new information that helps to understand the evolutionary history of life on Earth. Part of this information includes relationships between organisms. While phylogeny rep...Scientists continually obtain new information that helps to understand the evolutionary history of life on Earth. Part of this information includes relationships between organisms. While phylogeny represents the full understanding of evolutionary relationships, scientists also classify organisms into groups to use a common framework of language for all species known as binomial nomenclature.

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