yes you can, you just have to find one that fits what you're looking for
A physical representation to identify specific animals in a group, for example if you are trying to identify a specific bird you could use a dichotomous key of all birds to find one.
A home lizard normally spends most of its time in the house. A garden lizard on the other hand will look for its food in the garden or outdoors.
Not without seeing a picture - or having a detailed description ! I suggest you photograph it, and take the picture to your local library - see if you can find it in a book.
It could, but that doesn't mean it would.
It depends how far it (was?) dropped... It could break its leg, a rib, etc... What kind of lizard was it?
In high school.... seriously, that's about it.
The taxonomic key is a device used to identify unidentified organisms, so theoretically, it could be used to identify unknown carnivores. A dichotomous key is used to identify different species, so it too could be used in carnivorous animal identification.
A physical representation to identify specific animals in a group, for example if you are trying to identify a specific bird you could use a dichotomous key of all birds to find one.
Yes. Two subspecies of the same lizard species can interbreed. If they could not, they would be considered as separate species.
There are various things that could go wrong when using a dichotomous key. For instance missing essential information would affect the dichotomous key entirely.
Dichotomous thinking could be described as A. philosophical. B. eccentric. C. black and white. <--- D. closed-minded.
A dichotomous key is a special document that allows the reader to 'key out' an organism to some level, sometimes species, sometimes a level above species. Basically a key is a series of double statements. Each double statement has only one possible right answer; either the organism has some trait, or it doesn't. Depending on the answer, you are then taken to the next level of statements, each pair of statements whittles down the possible number of species that your organism could possibly be, and eventually lands you on the species, or genus that your organism is in.
black and white
A home lizard normally spends most of its time in the house. A garden lizard on the other hand will look for its food in the garden or outdoors.
a Lizark sounds like it could be a lizard shark cross . . . but I've heard nothing about this species and i don't think it is real .
Yes, but only if licked by a Komodo Dragon. Other species could lead to a salmonella infection.
A dichotomous key is a special document that allows the reader to 'key out' an organism to some level, sometimes species, sometimes a level above species. Basically a key is a series of double statements. Each double statement has only one possible right answer; either the organism has some trait, or it doesn't. Depending on the answer, you are then taken to the next level of statements, each pair of statements whittles down the possible number of species that your organism could possibly be, and eventually lands you on the species, or genus that your organism is in.