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Answer for the clue "Phylum, order or genus ", 5 letters:
taxon

Alternative clues for the word taxon

Word definitions for taxon in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
In biology , a taxon (plural taxa ; back-formation from taxonomy ) is a group of one or more populations of an organism or organisms seen by taxonomists to form a unit. Although neither is required, a taxon is usually known by a particular name and given ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (context taxonomy English) Any of the taxonomic categories, such as phylum or subspecies.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. animal or plant group having natural relations [syn: taxonomic group , taxonomic category ] [also: taxa (pl)]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1929, from German (1926), shortened from taxonomie (see taxonomy ).

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Taxon \Tax"on\ (t[a^]ks"[o^]n), n.; pl. taxa or taxons . a taxonomic group, or the name of a taxonomic grouping.

Usage examples of taxon.

Since for primitive mammals sleepless nights would have been more dangerous for the survival of the taxon than sexless nights, sleep should be a more powerful drive than sex-which, at least in most of us, it seems to be.

Named after Phil Hoffmann because it was one of his students who identified it as a basal spinosaur, maybe even the node taxon for the clade.

Lazarus taxon was one that disappeared from the fossil record, as if extinct, only to reappear later, as if rising from the dead.

Many more taxa exist, of course, than are shown by the few points in the figure.

But the curve is representative of the much denser array of points that would be necessary to characterize the tens of millions of separate taxa which have emerged during the history of life on our planet.

The major taxa, which have evolved most recently, are by and large the most complicated.

The genetic instructions of all the other taxa on Earth are written in the same language, with the same code book.

Since animal taxa such as mammals, reptiles or amphibians contain members with very different brain sizes, we cannot give a reliable estimate of the number of neurons in the brain of a typical representative of each taxon.

The cognitive abilities of chimpanzees force us, I think, to raise searching questions about the boundaries of the community of beings to which special ethical considerations are due, and can, I hope, help to extend our ethical perspectives downward through the taxa on Earth and upwards to extraterrestrial organisms, if they exist.

Although the relationship between these two taxa is not completely explained at the moment, such a division is presently accepted.

Due to the incompleteness of remains, exact relations among particular taxa included here are still difficult to determine.