asked 208k views
5 votes
Why is it that we use the two-name binomial nomenclature invented by Carl Linneaus still to this day?

A. Because mountain lions and pumas are actually very different animals.

B. Because the system is widely accepted and used all over the world universally.

C. Because everybody knows how to speak Latin and Greek.

D. Because Carl Linneaus was just that important.

asked
User JFer
by
7.7k points

2 Answers

6 votes

Answer:

B. Because the system is widely accepted and used all over the world universally.

Step-by-step explanation:

In contrast to earlier names that were made up of diagnostic phrases, binomial names (or “trivial” names, as Linnaeus himself called them) conferred no bias about the quality or value of plant species named. Rather, they served as labels by which a species could be universally addressed.

answered
User Paul Bruno
by
7.9k points
4 votes

Answer:

B. Because the system is widely accepted and used all over the world universally.

Step-by-step explanation:

We use the two-name binomial nomenclature invented by Carl Linneaus still to this day because, the system is widely accepted and used all over the world universally.

answered
User Xanderflood
by
7.6k points
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