Genus

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: ''See genus (mathematics) for the use of the term in mathematics.'' : ''See genus (music) for the use of the term in music.'' In biology, a '''genus''' (plural '''genera''') is a grouping in the classification of living organisms having one or more related and morphologically similar species. In the common binomial nomenclature, the name of an organism is composed of two parts: its genus (always capitalized) and a species modifier. An example is ''Homo sapiens'', the name for the human species which belongs to the genus Homo. See scientific classification for more details of this system. The '''type genus''' of a taxon is usually the first genus to be named and described. Families, and in plants all taxa up to division, are named after the type genus. The genus and these higher taxa are typified by a specimen that shows the characteristics of the genus. The specimen used to describe this species is preserved as the holotype and designated as a '''generitype''' in a zoological museum or a herbarium to be available for further study. A genus name in one kingdom is allowed to bear the same name as a genus or other taxon name in another kingdom. For instance, ''Anura'' is a genus of plants as well as the order of frogs; ''Aotus'' is both a pea and a monkey; ''Oenanthe'' and ''Oenanthe'' are genera of birds and plants respectively, as are ''Prunella'' and ''Prunella''. It is, however, not allowed for two genera within the same kingdom to have the same name. This explains why the Duck-billed Platypus is called ''Ornithorhynchus''; although ''Platypus'' was originally chosen for it, the name had already been given to the ambrosia beetle, an invertebrate. Invertebrates are in the same kingdom, Animalia, as the platypus so could not be used again for a different animal. '''See also:''' Linnaean taxonomy, cladisticsda:Slgt (biologi) de:Gattung (Biologie) es:Gnero fr:Genre (biologie) la:Genus ms:Genus nl:Genus sv:Slkte zh:属 (生物)