Taxonomic Categories

Classification is not a one-step procedure, but rather a series of stages, each representing a rank or category. The category is called a taxonomic category because it is a part of the larger taxonomic arrangement, and all categories combined make up the taxonomic hierarchy. Each category, also known as a classification unit, indicates a rank and is frequently referred to as a taxon (plural taxa). A taxonomic category is a category that is part of a taxonomic arrangement, and all categories combined make up the taxonomic hierarchy. Thus, organisms are divided into kingdoms, phyla or divisions, classes, orders, families, genera, and species.

Insects are a group of organisms with three pairs of jointed legs and other characteristics in common. It indicates that insects are recognizable concrete objects that can be categorized and so have a rank or category assigned to them. The categories are represented by groups of people. Rank is also indicated by category. Each rank, or taxon, is a classification unit. These taxonomic groups/categories are biological entities in their own right, not just morphological aggregations.

The establishment of common categories such as kingdom, phylum or division (for plants), class, order, family, genus, and species have resulted from taxonomic investigations of all known organisms. Species is the lowest level of classification for all organisms, including those in the plant and animal kingdoms. The knowledge of characteristics of an individual or group of organisms is required to categorize an organism into distinct categories. This aids in the identification of similarities and differences between individuals of the same species as well as individuals of different species.

Let us take a detailed look at different taxonomic categories:

(A)Species: A species is a group of individual beings that share fundamental characteristics. Based on morphological features, one species is separated from other closely related species. Mangiferaindica, Solanum tuberosum (potato), and Pantheraleo are just a few examples (lion). The first three words, Mangifera, Solanum, and Panthera, are genera and denote a higher level of taxon or category, while the first three words, indica, tuberosum, and leo, are specific epithets. Each genus may have one or more specific epithets that refer to various creatures that share morphological characteristics. Panthera, for example, has the specific epithet tigris, and Solanum comprises species such as nigrum and melongena. Humans are members of the species sapiens, which is part of the genus Homo.As a result, the scientific designation for a human being is Homo sapiens. Species is regarded as the least inclusive and highly specific category of the taxonomic hierarchy.

(B) Genus: A genus is a collection of related species that share more characteristics than those from other genera. Genera can be defined as groups of closely related species. Potato and brinjal, for example, are two separate species that both belong to the Solanum genus. Panthera species include the lion (Pantheraleo), leopard (Pantherapardus), and tiger (Pantheratigris), all of which share several characteristics. This genus is distinct from the Felis genus, which includes cats.

(C) Family:In comparison to genus and species, a family consists of a set of related genera with fewer similarities. In plants, vegetative and reproductive characteristics are used to classify them into families. Solanum, Petunia, and Datura are three separate genera of plants that belong to the Solanaceae family. The genus Panthera, which includes the lion, tiger, and leopard, is placed in the family Felidae with the genus Felis (cats). Similarly, if you compare and contrast the characteristics of a cat and a dog, you would notice some parallels and variances. Felidae and Canidae are the two different families that they belong to.

(D) Order:Species, genus, and family are all based on a set of comparable characteristics. The aggregates of characters are used to identify the order and other higher taxonomic groups. The group of families that have a few similar characteristics is called order, which is a higher category. When compared to the different genera in a family, there are fewer comparable characters. Plant groups such as Convolvulaceae and Solanaceae are classified as Polymoniales based on their floral characteristics. Carnivora is an animal order that includes families like Felidae and Canidae.

(E) Class: A class is a taxonomic rank (a taxon) that contains species with similar characteristics; it is further divided into one or more orders. A class is a major taxonomic rank below the phylum (or division) and above the order in the biological categorization of life. This category includes orders that are related. Order Primata, which includes monkeys, gorillas, and gibbons, is placed in class Mammalia alongside order Carnivora, which includes tigers, cats, and dogs. Other orders also exist in the Mammalia class.

(F) Phylum/Division:A phylum is a classification or taxonomic rank that falls between kingdom and class. The Phylum is the next higher classification, which includes animals such as fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. All of these are classified as members of the phylum Chordata because they share characteristics such as the presence of a notochord and a dorsal hollow neural system. Classes with a few comparable features in plants are given to a higher category called Division.

In biological classification, the division is a taxonomic rank that is employed differently in zoology and botany. The division is a level similar to a phylum in botany and mycology. The term division is used in zoology to refer to an optional rank that is subordinate to the infraclass and superordinate to the cohort.

(G) Kingdom:In the classification system of animals, all animals belonging to distinct phyla are placed in the top category, Kingdom Animalia. The Kingdom Plantae, on the other hand, is unique in that it includes all plants of diverse divisions. These two groups are today referred to as the animal and plant kingdoms.

(H) Domain:A domain is the largest of all groupings in the classification of life in biology. At this level, the Archaea domain, Bacteria domain, and Eukarya domain are the three agreed-upon categories. The domain is considered to be the most inclusive category of the hierarchy.

The amount of shared features decreases as we progress from species to kingdom. The lower the taxon, the more features the members of the taxon share. The more difficult it is to determine a taxon's relationship to other taxa at the same level, the higher the category. As a result, the classification problem gets more complicated. Therefore, the taxonomists have also created sub-categories in the hierarchy to make the placement of distinct taxa more sound and scientific.

Figure 1: Taxonomic Hierarchy.

 

Table 1: Taxonomic ranks of some common organisms.