The Linnaean System
Systematics Order

Order

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Definition: Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Tribe
Genus
Species

Order

Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
In the Linnaean system (and taxonomic systems based on it), the Order is a taxonomic category between Class and Family. An order is group of organisms, e.g. Lepidoptera, Squamata, Primates, etc that although differing quite a bit among themselves still have a large degree of characteristics in common (e.g. all Lepidoptera butterflies and moths) have minute scales on their wings, a soft-bodied herbivorous larval form (caterpillar), mouthparts in the adult specialized for feeding on nectar, etc). As with all the groupings whether a group of organisms ranks as an order or not is a subjective decision, although usually based on the traditional status of that group in earlier literature. There is also a tendency towards taxonomic inflation, especially among tetrapods but also certain groups of invertebrates, with sub- or infra-orders and even families) being promoted to ordinal status. Also, invertebrate orders tend to differ among themselves much more than vertebrate orders (e.g. an invertebrate order e.g. Coleoptera beetles) might correspond in diversity to a suborder or cohort or infraclass of Vertebrates). Cladistics tries to solve this arbitrariness by doing away with the Linnaean system altogether.

Superorder
Grandorder
Order
Suborder
Infraorder
Parvorder


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page by M. Alan Kazlev (Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License)
page uploaded 20 May 2002
checked ATW021211
(originally uploaded on Kheper site 27 May 1999)
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