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Classification of Living Organisms • As living things are constantly being investigated, new attributes are revealed that affect how organisms are placed in a standard classification system. 2 What is taxonomy? • Taxonomy is the branch of biology concerned with the grouping and naming of organisms • Biologists who study this are called taxonomists How did it start? • People wanted to organize their world so they began grouping, or classifying everything they saw. Examples: • Things that break down dead materials • Things that reproduce sexually • Things that are single-celled • Things that have cell walls • Things that eat other organisms • Things that have a nucleus • Things that are multicellular TPS: What categories of living things do you remember? Why classify? • To help us see relationships, similarities and differences • To help us organize all the organisms we discover . . . • To give every species a name based on a standard method so scientists from different countries can talk about the same animal without confusion Who is Carolus Linnaeus? • Carolus Linnaeus was a Swedish botanist • Developed a 7-level (taxa) classification system based on similarities between organisms • • • • • • • • The Seven Level System Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species • • • • • • • • Dear King Phillip Called Oprah For Good Spices Domains • Domains are the broadest taxonomic classification of living organisms • The three Domains: Archaea Bacteria Eukarya 10 Domains are Divided into Kingdoms • Archaea----- Archaebacteria • Bacteria ------ Eubacteria • Eukarya ------- Protist Fungi Plantae Animalia 11 How does it work? • There are 6 broad kingdoms • Every living thing that we know of fits into one of the six kingdoms • Each level gets more specific as fewer organisms fit into any one group Six Kingdoms of Life 13 • The grouping of organisms into KINGDOMS is based on 3 factors: – 1. Cell Type (prokaryotic or eukaryotic) – 2. Cell Number (unicellular or multicellular) – 3. Feeding Type (autotroph or heterotroph) 14 1. Cell Type- The presence or absence of cellular structures such as the nucleus, mitochondria, or a cell wall Prokaryotes or Eukaryotes 15 Prokaryotes – Bacteria! • DO NOT HAVE: •An organized nucleus •Structured organelles 16 17 Eukaryotes • DO HAVE: • nucleus organized with a membrane • other organelles 18 19 2nd criteria for Kingdom Divisions: Cell Number •Unicellular- single celled organism – protozoans, bacteria, some algae •Multicellular- many celled organism – cells start to specialize/differentiate 20 • Unicellular • Multicellular 21 3rd Criteria for Kingdom Divisions Feeding Type - How the organisms get their food –Autotroph or Producer Make their own food –Heterotroph or Consumer Must eat other organisms to survive Includes decomposers – those that eat dead matter! 22 6 Kingdoms • • • • • • Archaebacteria Prokaryotes Eubacteria Protista Fungi Eukaryotes Plantae Animalia 23 Archaebacteria • Ancient bacteria– Live in very harsh environments – extremophiles 24 Eubacteria • It is the eubacteria that most people are talking about when they say bacteria, because they live in more neutral conditions. 25 Bacteria • Bacteria are unicellular prokaryotes 26 Protists • Protists include many widely ranging microbes, including slime molds, protozoa and primitive algae. Odds & Ends Kingdom 27 Protista Kingdom • There are animal-like, fungus-like, and plant-like protists • Some are beneficial • Some protists can cause diseases in humans 28 Protists Nutrition • Protists can be autotrophs or heterotrophs 29 Fungi Kingdom • The Kingdom Fungi includes some of the most important organisms. • By breaking down dead organic material, they continue the cycle of nutrients through ecosystems. 30 • All fungi are eukaryotic • They may be unicellular or multicellular Fungi Unicellular (yeast) Multicellular • All fungi have a cell wall 31 Fungi Ringworm • Fungi can be very helpful and delicious • Many antibacterial drugs are derived from fungi • Fungi also causes a number of plant and animal diseases: Penicillin 32 Fungi Nutrition • All fungi are heterotrophs - Saprophytes-get their nutrients from dead organic matter - Parasites – absorb from a host, eventually killing the host 33 Plant Kingdom • All plants are multicellular, their cells having a cell wall, and… • they are autotrophs 34 Animalia Kingdom All animals are: -Multicellular: cells lacking a cell wall -Heterotrophs -Capable of movement at some point in their lives. 35 At this point, your Characteristics of Kingdoms Comparison Matrix is complete CHECK YOUR WORK MAKE CORRECTIONS/ADDITIONS AS NEEDED 36 Characteristics of Kingdom Comparison Matrix Cell Wall Domain Kingdom Cell Type Cell # Feeding Type Archaea Archaebacteria Prokaryote Unicellular Autotroph Yes Eubacteria Prokaryote Unicellular Both Yes Protista Eukaryote Most Unicellular Both Yes & NO Fungi Eukaryote both Heterotroph Yes Plantae Eukaryote Multicellular Autotroph Yes Animalia Eukaryote Multicellular Heterotroph Bacteria Eukarya NO 37