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Classification Finding Order in Diversity Biologists have… • identified and named 1.5 million different species • estimate 2-100 million additional species have yet to be discovered Why Classify? • To study the diversity of life, scientists must name each organism • Scientists use a classification system to name organisms and group them in a logical manner • Taxonomy is the study of naming organisms – Names are universally accepted – Names have biological significance – Categories go from larger groups to smaller groups. • Ex) teacher= larger, biology teacher = smaller Assigning Scientific Names • Calling things by their common name can be confusing – Names change by region • Ex) puma, mountain lion, panther & cougar are all regional names for Felis concolor • In the 18th century scientists used Latin & Greek to assign scientific names, because these languages were common to all. Early Naming • In the beginning, scientific names were often detailed physical descriptions – Often names were 20+ words long • There was difficulty in standardizing names because different scientists described organisms differently – Ex) the blue-winged/red breasted/ white stomached bird Binomial Nomenclature • Carolus Linnaeus developed a two word naming system called binomial nomenclature • Each species is give a two part scientific name: – The name is written in italics – The first word is capitalized and the second is written in lowercase – The first word is the genus (closely related species) – The second word is the species (name usually describes an important trait) Linnaeus’s System of Classification • Hierarchal system, with seven levels • Each level is referred to as a taxon • From largest to smallest: – – – – – – – Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species “King Philip Cried Out For Good Soup” Which similarities are most important? • Organisms that look very similar may not share a common ancestor. • Their similar appearance may be the result of convergent evolution. • Darwin’s idea of descent with modification gave rise to the study of phylogeny, or evolutionary relationships among organisms. Evolutionary Classification • Biologists now group organisms into categories that represent lines of descent, or phylogeny, not just physical similarities. • Species within a genus are more closely related to each other than to those in another genus because they share a recent common ancestor. • The higher the level of the first taxon in common between two organisms, the farther back in time the common ancestor. Classification Using Cladograms • Cladistic analysis: identification and consideration of only those characteristics of organisms that are evolutionary innovations (new characteristics that arise as lineages evolve over time) – Characteristics that appear in recent parts of lineage but not older members are called derived characteristics – These characteristics can be used to construct a cladogram to show the evolutionary relationships between organisms – Cladograms are useful tools for scientists to understand how one lineage branched from another in the course of evolution. Similarities in DNA & RNA • The genes of many organisms show important similarities at the molecular level. • Similarities in DNA can be used to help determine classification and evolutionary relationships • The more similar the DNA sequence of two species, the more recently they shared a common ancestor and the more closely related they are in evolutionary terms. Molecular Clocks • Comparisons of DNA can also be used to mark the passage of evolutionary time. • A molecular clock uses DNA comparisons to estimate the length of time that two species have been evolving independently. • A molecular clock relies on mutations to mark time. • The degree of dissimilarity in the DNA of two species indicates how long ago the two species shared a common ancestor.