ctenophore family
Học thuậtThân thiện
A marine biologist carefully observes a ctenophore family in a research aquarium.
Definition
- Noun:
- A taxonomic family of ctenophores: A group of marine invertebrate animals, commonly known as comb jellies, classified together based on shared biological characteristics within the scientific classification system.
Usage
- The term is used in scientific, particularly zoological and marine biological, contexts to discuss the classification and relationships among different types of ctenophores.
- It is a compound noun where "ctenophore" specifies the type of organism and "family" indicates its rank in biological taxonomy (Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species).
Examples
Advanced Usage
- In taxonomic discussions, a "ctenophore family" sits between the order and the genus. For example:
Variants and Related Words
- Ctenophore (n): The common name for any member of the phylum Ctenophora; a comb jelly.
- Family (n, in taxonomy): A principal rank in biological classification, above genus and below order.
Synonyms
- Taxonomic family of comb jellies: A descriptive synonym.
- Ctenophoran family: A less common variant using the adjectival form.
Notes
- "Ctenophore family" is a specialized scientific term. The word "ctenophore" itself comes from Greek (, "comb" + , "bearer"), referring to the rows of ciliary plates (comb rows) the animals use for locomotion.
- This term is not typically used in idioms, phrasal verbs, or everyday conversation.
A marine biologist carefully observes a ctenophore family in a research aquarium.
Noun
- a family of ctenophores