Biology, asked by sahilv0422, 2 months ago

Taxonomy comprises
(1) Identification
(3) Classification
(2) Nomenclature
(4) All of these​

Answers

Answered by googlystyle
0

Answer:

Taxonomy is the science of naming, describing and classifying organisms and includes all plants, animals and microorganisms of the world. Using morphological, behavioural, genetic and biochemical observations, taxonomists identify, describe and arrange species into classifications, including those that are new to science. Taxonomy identifies and enumerates the components of biological diversity providing basic knowledge underpinning management and implementation of the Convention on Biological Diversity. Unfortunately, taxonomic knowledge is far from complete. In the past 250 years of research, taxonomists have named about 1.78 million species of animals, plants and micro-organisms, yet the total number of species is unknown and probably between 5 and 30 million.

Answered by chinki004
3

all of these

taxonomy comprises identification, nomenclature,and classification

we use taxonomy to classify organism and with the help of taxonomy we can easily classify organism and able to name them

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