Just some of the animals native to the Philippines include the tarsier which belongs to the genus Tarsius, the Philippine Flying lemur (species Cynocephalus volans), the Philippine mouse-deer (species Tragulus nigricans), the binturong (species Arctictis binturong) and many more. See the related links for more details.
Scientific names are all in latin, so the scientific name of the dragonflies is Anisoptera (infraorder), in the Philippines, as it is everywhere else.
malungay moringa ofelia
Foods do not have scientific names. Species of plants, animals, fungi, have Latin names, but cheese is none of these.
Nile Perch
cow
hmmm.. I have one... Dillenia philippinensis.. A flowering plant from the Philippines.
Scientific names are all in latin, so the scientific name of the dragonflies is Anisoptera (infraorder), in the Philippines, as it is everywhere else.
my name is kishan
On google just look up scientific names for plants and animals it works just try it.
malungay moringa ofelia
Yes, they have.
For animals: organism
x Citrofortunella microcarpa is the scientific name of the calamansi tree. The tree is native to the Philippines, where it also is called 'lemoncito'. In Western countries, other common names include acid orange, calamondin orange, and Panama orange.
Foods do not have scientific names. Species of plants, animals, fungi, have Latin names, but cheese is none of these.
Animals do not name themselves, people do that..
You can go to scientificname.net
cow