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Taxons with their associated colours
Animalia |
rgb(211,211,164)
|
Archaeplastida |
rgb(144,238,144) (palegreen2)
|
Fungi |
rgb(173,216,230) (lightblue)
|
Chromalveolata |
rgb(173,238,63)
|
Rhizaria |
rgb(225,204,252)
|
Excavata |
rgb(240,230,140) (khaki)
|
Amoebozoa |
rgb(255,200,160)
|
Bacteria |
rgb(211,211,211) (lightgray)
|
Archaea |
rgb(236,210,210)
|
Viruses |
rgb(238,130,238) (violet)
|
Default and incertae sedis |
rgb(114, 177, 255) (linen)
|
Colours not produced by this template:
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Ichnotaxa |
rgb(221, 165, 127)
|
Ootaxa |
rgb(255,192,203) (pink)
|
Some potentially helpful information:
- Animalia: Animals. Duh.
- Archaeplastida: Land plants, green algae, red algae and glaucophytes (another kind of algae).
- Fungi: Funguses, obviously. Rather closely related to animals.
- Chromalveolata: Golden algae, brown algae, yellow-green algae, water molds and a whole bunch of other (predominantly unicellular) organisms (as you might've guessed, related to plants).
- Rhizaria: Amoeba-like organisms related to plants.
- Excavata: A bunch of unicellular organisms related to plants. Named after a couple of its species' primary occupation of "excavating" the intestines of insects.
- Amoebozoa: Amoebas and slime molds, mostly. Related to animals and fungi.
- Bacteria and Archaea: Single-celled organisms that lack a cell nucleus. The two groups mostly differ in their metabolic pathways and cell membranes.
- Viruses: Those small thingies that need host cells to replicate.
- incertae sedis: A term used when scientists don't have a fucking clue how to classify the organism in question.
Also, when copying stuff from Wikipedia's documentation page for the taxobox template, I found out that scientists have invented a new kind of taxon for footprints as well as for eggs: ichnotaxa and ootaxa respectively. What will they come up with next?!
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