• The fossil plant
Paradinandra suecica could not be assigned to any family, but was placed
incertae sedis within the order
Ericales when described in 2001. • The fossil
Gluteus minimus, described in 1975, could not be assigned to any known animal
phylum. The genus is therefore
incertae sedis within the kingdom
Animalia. • While it was unclear to which order the
New World vultures (family Cathartidae) should be assigned, they were placed in Aves
incertae sedis. It was later agreed to place them in a separate order, Cathartiformes. •
Bocage's longbill,
Motacilla bocagii, previously known as
Amaurocichla bocagii, is a species of
passerine bird that belongs to the superfamily
Passeroidea. Since it was unclear to which family it belongs, it was classified as Passeroidea
incertae sedis, until a 2015 phylogenetic study placed it in
Motacilla of
Motacillidae. •
Parakaryon myojinensis, a single-celled organism that is apparently distinct from
prokaryotes
and eukaryotes, being the only identified species with a completely unknown position within the
tree of life. •
Biological dark matter, genetic material produced from unidentified microorganisms that appears to match no known species. Like
Parakaryon, its producers' positions in the tree of life are completely unknown. •
Metallogenium is a bacterium that can form star-shaped minerals. •
Circothecidae are a family of
Cambrian animals, sometimes attributed to the
Hyolitha, though some authors suggest (on the basis of no specified evidence) that they are definitely not. • The
frosted phoenix moth (
Titanomis sisyrota) is so rare and so obscure it is unable to be placed in any family within the
Lepidoptera. • While some taxonomists consider the
Ediacaran biota to have been early animals, their true position within
Eukaryota is unclear. Proposals include
cnidarians,
articulates,
fungi,
colonial protists,
algae,
lichens, or even an entirely unrelated and extinct
kingdom. ==In formal nomenclature==