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Gill Sans Bold Biology Preliminary Course Stage 6 Life on Earth Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 0 20 I er b to T S c O EN g in D M t a r EN o p or AM c n 2 Number: 43210 Title: Life on earth This publication is copyright New South Wales Department of Education and Training (DET), however it may contain material from other sources which is not owned by DET. We would like to acknowledge the following people and organisations whose material has been used: Photograph of foraminifera courtesy NASA Part 2 p 17 Photographs of archaeobacteria © R.A. Binns, CSIRO, taken from JAMSTEC submersible “Shinkai-6500” Part 3 p 15 Graph showing relationship of plant formations to rainfall and temperature, from Camm, E et al (1995) Interactions and change, Longman Australia, Melbourne. Part 6 p 6 COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING This material has been reproduced and communicated to you on behalf of the New South Wales Department of Education and Training (Centre for Learning Innovation) pursuant to Part VB of the Copyright Act 1968 (the Act). The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further reproduction or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act. All reasonable efforts have been made to obtain copyright permissions. All claims will be settled in good faith. Published by Centre for Learning Innovation (CLI) 51 Wentworth Rd Strathfield NSW 2135 _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _ Copyright of this material is reserved to the Crown in the right of the State of New South Wales. Reproduction or transmittal in whole, or in part, other than in accordance with provisions of the Copyright Act, is prohibited without the written authority of the Centre for Learning Innovation (CLI). © State of New South Wales, Department of Education and Training 2007. Contents Introduction ............................................................................... 2 Organising life: why classify? .................................................... 3 The need to classify .............................................................................4 Constructing dichotomous keys ................................................ 8 Plant classification..............................................................................10 Animal classification...........................................................................21 Additional resources................................................................ 25 Suggested answers................................................................. 27 Exercises – Part 4 ................................................................... 31 Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 1 Introduction The study of present-day organisms increases our understanding of past organisms and environments. In this part you will be given opportunities to learn to: • explain the need for scientists to classify organisms • explain how levels of organisation in a hierarchical system assist classification • describe the main features of the binomial system in naming organisms and relate these to the concepts of genus and species In this part you will be given opportunities to: • perform a first-hand investigation and gather information to construct and use simple dichotomous keys and show how they can be used to identify a range of plants and animals using live and preserved specimens, photographs or diagrams of plants and animals. Extracts from Biology Stage 6 Syllabus © Board of Studies NSW, originally issued 1999. Revised October 2002. The most up-to-date version can be found on the Board’s website at http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/syllabus_hsc/index.html. 2 Life on Earth Organising life: why classify? Have you ever stopped to consider how the things around you are named? How do you locate items in the supermarket? Some larger stores provide a floor plan or map to enable the consumer to locate the items they require. Other guides include signs that indicate the type of product located in that area eg. children’s clothing. How are things classified (grouped) in your local supermarket? How are different stores classified or grouped in a shopping centre? If you were presented with a previously unseen object, how would you go about classifying it? In other words, how would you decide the group to which it should belong? Most things are grouped to make them easier to identify. This process is called classification. The practice of classification is called taxonomy. Every day you come across a diversity of objects that you mentally classify or group. This helps you understand the world around you. Putting things into groups tells you something about objects. This enables you to talk about them and pass on information easily. Scientists use taxonomy to classify organisms based on similarities such as physiology (function), structure, reproductive means or methods of obtaining nutrition. This makes it possible to identify unknown specimens by a comparison with known examples. The criteria for classification becomes more specific as the group to which the organism belongs becomes smaller. If you look at the contents of your house it is possible to classify all the objects based on function. Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 3 For example, the first level of grouping or classifying might be the room in the house where you usually find the object. The object might be found in the kitchen, bathroom, lounge room or a bedroom. Once you have decided on the room you might find it in, consider its function. The cake tin, shown above, belongs to the kitchen, but it can be further classified into a smaller group of specialised items, usually located in the kitchen. You can then use your mental classification of an object to locate the object in the house. For example, the coffee plunger will probably be in the kitchen with the toaster. While the bath, basin and electric toothbrush would be together in the bathroom. The need to classify In order to classify, you need to carefully observe the things you want to classify. Then you compare them. To compare things, you look for similarities and differences. Similar things are put in the same group. Once you have established your groups and the reasons for placing things into each group, you have built a classification system. When you apply a classification system, you usually follow a systematic approach to narrow down the specific identification of the specimen. Scientists all around the world use the same naming system. This makes it possible to communicate information with the confidence that 4 Life on Earth everyone is talking about the same organism. The classification system brings order into the millions of organisms that inhabit the Earth and reflects the evolutionary relationships between organisms. In summary scientists need to classify organism to: • bring order into the multitude of living organism • to show evolutionary relationships between organisms • to create a universal naming system to improve communication. Levels of organisation Within any classification system the groups are ordered. The structure in classification is hierarchical. A hierarchy means that the groups become smaller as you work your way through the classification system. When considering the classification of living things, the largest group is called the kingdom. Each kingdom has several smaller groups called phyla or phylum (singular), these are sub–divided into groups called classes. Classes contain many orders, which are made up of families. A family is still further divided into two other smaller groups, the genus and then species. This means that as you go from one level to the next, the organisms become more alike. phylum class order family genus species What’s in a name? Naming organisms would be very difficult without some sort of system. Can you imagine what it would be like if everyone used their own method of naming organisms? This occurs quite frequently within Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 5 regions or even countries, where plants and animals are given common names. Some species could end up with a number of different names depending on the location. For example, the fish called a mulloway is also known as a jewfish, a jewel fish and a butterfish. People in different regions would all call this fish a different name but in all regions its scientific name is Argyosomus hololepidotus. Confusion would occur if you were trying to communicate information about a particular organism without having a common scientific name. To overcome difficulties in naming living things a Swedish naturalist, Carolus Linnaeus, published a naming system in 1753 which was based on two words. The two words used to identify all organisms are the generic name (genus) and its specific name (species). The genus is spelt with a capital letter and the species with a lower case letter. Both words are italicised or underlined. This approach to naming organisms is called the binomial system. These systematic (or scientific) names are usually written in Latin or Greek. This system of naming things is described in the International Rules of Nomenclature and its application is supervised by an international committee. The rules used to name plants and animals are different. An international register of biological names is kept to ensure that no two species have the same scientific name. Common name Genus Species earthworm Lumbricus terrestris human Homo sapiens dog Canis familiaris paperbark Melaleuca quinquinerva lemon-scented gum Eucalyptus citriodora woollybutt Eucalyptus longifolia The two members of the Eucalyptus genus in the table above are similar looking trees that are closely related. They share many of the same characteristics but differ in the shape of their leaves. They share the same classification until you get down to the species level. The final classification into genus and species is based on more than anatomical similarity. A species is defined as a group of organisms that can interbreed under ‘natural conditions’ producing fertile offspring. The species level is based primarily on reproductive and genetic similarities rather than structural or morphological features. 6 Life on Earth For example if a horse and donkey mate, the resulting offspring is a mule, which is not fertile. The stipulation of natural conditions is important as some species have been crossbred in captivity, where they would not have been able to in the wild, for example tigers and lions in zoos. However it is possible for flowers to be cross–pollinated to form fertile hybrids. A genus contains closely related organisms that cannot interbreed but share a recent common ancestor. Complete Exercise 4.1: Naming organisms. Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 7 Constructing dichotomous keys In biology, keys are used to compare the specimens being identified. Biological keys vary in form but a commonly used key is a dichotomous key. The term ‘dichotomous key’ is derived from the Greek word that means cut into two parts. The key narrows down the name of a specimen by taking each group and dividing it two smaller groups, based on similar features. Look at the example that follows. animals vertebrate aquatic not a vertebrate (invertebrate) not aquatic (terrestrial) Can you think of another branch for this group? What features were used to classify the organisms in this example? _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Check your answer. Other forms of keys Sometimes a dichotomous key can be written as a series of questions with a yes/no response, that determines the path taken through the key until the specimens group or unique identification is established. 8 Life on Earth Look at the following example used to identify classes of mammals. 1 Does the animal lay eggs? a) Yes ………………………………………………..monotreme b) No …………………………………………………go to 2 2 Does the animal have a pouch? a) Yes …………………………………………………marsupial b) No ………………………………………………….placental Use the key above to identify each of the animals pictured here. Animal A Animal B Animal C A:__________________________ C:__________________________ B:__________________________ Check your answers. Each of these groups could be further sub-divided into smaller groups, until you get individual animal types. Such keys will be used in the next part of this module for identification of different plant and animal species. When using a dichotomous key there are some points to remember: Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 9 • always read both choices • if you get lost go back to the last division that you are certain of and then go through the steps again • if you are not sure, try both alternatives and see where it takes you • if you don't know the meaning of a word look it up • measurements should be measured not guessed • make sure the answer makes sense. Plant classification Plants are divided into five major groups based on structural and reproductive features. The table following summarises the important points in plant classification. You do not need to memorise all the information in the table. Once it is completed you will use the information from the table and a dichotomous key to identify some examples of plants. Read through the table below describing the plant groups. Complete the missing words as you go. The first letter of the missing word is provided as a clue. Answers are given in the suggested answer section. Group Examples Red algae (Rhodophyta) Diatoms and other singlecelled algae. Brown algae (Phaeophyta) Characteristics (structural and reproductive) Simple plants without true r__________, s____________ or l_____________. No vascular tissue for transporting food and water. No v____________ tissue for transporting food and water. Most are aquatic (marine and some freshwater) Green algae (Chlorophyta) Single-celled forms can reproduce asexually by binary fission or by producing spores as well as sexually by producing gametes. Bryophytes mosses and liverworts Small plants without true r________. Instead of roots they have simple cellular filaments called r____________. Possess simple stems and leaves. No v__________ tissue for transporting food and water. 10 Life on Earth Most grow only in moist habitats. Depend on water for sexual reproduction. Mosses have alternation of generations involving gametophyte and sporophyte. Pteridophyta ferns eg. fish-bone, maiden hair, tree fern, bracken fern Have true roots, stems and leaves. Have vascular tissue for food and water transport. Can live in dry as well as moist habitats. Reproduce by rhizomes, spores and gametes. Have an alternation of generations involving s_____________ and g____________ plants. The gametes require w_______ so that male and female can be transferred. Gymnosperms conifers such as pines; cycads such as Australian burrawang palm. Land plants some of which can grow into large trees. Vascular system well developed. Reproduce by s____________ that are u_________________. In most, the uncovered seeds rest on woody scales that are part of a c________. (Seeds are reproductive structures containing an e____________, stores f__________ and a protective cover). Angiosperm (monocots and dicots) all f______________ plants, for example eucalyptus, wattle, daisy, daffodil, orchids, grass Vascular system well developed. The reproductive structures are the f__________. Following pollination and fertilisation, s__________ are formed, usually enclosed within the f_________, which is the ripened ovary. The pteridophytes, gymnosperms and angiosperms are commonly grouped together as the tracheophytes or vascular plants. 1 Can you suggest a reason for the division into the different plant groups listed in the table? Hint: Look at the types of features that are described for each plant group. Which features are always included? _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 11 2 Which of these features would be easy to observe? Which would be more difficult. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Check your answers. Using a plant key Use the key to identify the plants pictured following. List the steps used to name the plant pictured. The first one is done for you. Dichotomous key for the plant kingdom 1 a) contains vascular tissue …………………………………go to 2 b) no vascular tissue ……………………………………….go to 4 2 a) possess flowers ……………………………………Angiosperm b) no flowers ……………………………………………….go to 3 3 a) naked seeds ……………………………………….Gymnosperm b) spores under leaves ………………………………Pteridophytes 4 a) small, spore producing land plants ………………….Bryophytes b) aquatic spore producing plants …………………………. .Algae 12 Life on Earth Plant Features Produces spores in capsules No vascular tissue No flowers Small land plant Steps: 1 (b) no vascular tissue go to 4 4 (a) small spore producing land Answer: Bryophyte (Photo: Jane West) vascular tissue no flowers naked seeds in cones Steps: (Photo: Julie Haeusler ©LMP) Answer: Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 13 vascular tissue no flowers spores under leaves Steps: Answer: (Photo: Jane West) no vascular tissue no flowers aquatic Steps: Answer: (Photo: Jane West) 14 Life on Earth vascular tissue flowers Steps: Answer: (Photo: Jane West) Check your answers. Plant classification within a genus Each level of classification shares similar features with the other organisms at the same level. You will recall that as you move down the classification hierarchy the similarities between the organisms at each level increases. For example, similar groups of organisms within a family would belong to the same genus, and these are divided again into even more specifically similar organisms called species. In this activity you will be identifying four species of the genus Banksia from either live specimens or using the diagrams following. If you have access to live specimens list the species below. (You might like to send your teacher dried plant material eg. a leaf from each plant.) _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 15 If you cannot gain access to any of the plants within this group, use the diagrams and photographs provided. If you have access, look at the Biology page on the LMP website where the photographs and key are reproduced in colour. http://www.lmpc.edu.au/science A key to the most common species of the Sydney region is given below. Banksia: a key to the most common species of the Sydney region This key has been modified from Beadle, Evans and Carolin (Eds) Flora of the Sydney region. 1 a) Style permanently hooked at tip ……………………………….2 b) Style finally straight or gently curved upwards ………………..3 2 a) Leaves small, 10-15 mm long, narrow and crowded on branches, margins curved under ………………………..Banksia ericifolia b) Leaves 3-8 cm long, narrow, small teeth present near tip, margins curved under………………………Banksia spinulosa 3 a) Leaves 2-10 cm long, white on undersurface ………………….4 b) Leaves 8-16 cm long, lighter but not white on undersurface. Margins distinctly and evenly serrated ……...Banksia serrata 4 a) Leaves less than 1 cm wide. Spike flowers 4-9 cm long, yellow ………………………………………………Banksia marginata b) Leaves generally 1-2 cm wide …………………………………5 5 a) Tree up to 16 m high. Adult leaves mostly with smooth margins, juvenile leaves toothed. …………Banksia integrifolia b) Shrubs, usually not more than 3 metres high. Leaves mostly irregularly toothed. Young shoots with covering of rusty hairs …………………………………………….Banksia oblongifolia 16 Life on Earth Unknown Banksia 1 (Photo: Jane West) (Photo: Jane West) Name of Banksia___________________________________________ Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 17 Unknown Banksia 2 (Photo: Jane West) (Photo: Jane West) Name of Banksia ___________________________________________ 18 Life on Earth Unknown Banksia 3 (Photo: Jane West) (Photo: Jane West) Name of Banksia___________________________________________ Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 19 Unknown Banksia 4 Underside of leaf is white Leaf irregularly toothed Shrubs, usually not more than 3 metres high. (Photo: Jane West) Styles straight Name of Banksia ___________________________________________ 20 Life on Earth Complete Exercise 4.2: Plant classification. Animal classification The animal kingdom is also classified according to the similar structural features possessed by the organisms within a division. The following key summarises the major commonly used groupings for the kingdom. The kingdom classification represents one division from the four kingdom classification system, hence the protozoans are included as part of the animal kingdom. You do not need to remember the names of the groups in the key. The division following shows only the classification of the chordata. ANIMAL KINGDOM Phylum Chordata Sub-phylum Vertebrata Classes: Agnatha Chondrichthyes Osteichthyes Amphibia Reptilia Aves Mammalia Part 4: Classification of life on Earth Sub-phylum Urochordata For example: sea squirts or cunjevoi 21 Vertebrate groups The table below provides more information about one of the groups from this key – phylum chordata, sub-phylum vertebrata. You will use information from the following table to construct a dichotomous key. Class/example Characteristics Agnatha (lamprays, hagfish) gills, no bony jaws, cartilage skeleton, no paired fins, two chambered heart, ectothermic Chondrichthyes (sharks, rays) gills, cartilage skeleton, mouth on ventral side, paired fins, two chambered heart, ectothermic Osteichthyes (snapper, bream) gills, bony skeleton, paired fins, two chambered heart, ectothermic Amphibia (frog, toad) spend part of their life cycle in the water and part on land adults breathe with lungs, thin moist skin, three chambered heart, lay eggs in water, ectothermic Reptila (snakes, lizards, turtles) breathe with lungs, three chambered heart, lay leathery eggs on land, dry scaly skin, ectothermic Aves (kookaburra, cockatoo) breathe with lungs, covered with feathers, fore legs modified as wings, lay hard shelled eggs (calcareous) on land, four chambered heart, endothermic Mammalia (wombat, possum) breathe with lungs, body covered with hair, females nourish young with milk from mammary glands, four chambered heart, endothermic Use the information to design your own key for the vertebrate groups in the space below. You may find it helpful to complete a branching key first, such as the one for the animal kingdom on the preceding page. Once you have completed this you should transfer the information on to the scaffold provided here. Look back to the key on plants as a model. 1 a) …………………………………………………………….…. b) ………………. ……………………………………………… 2 a) ……………………….………………………………………. b) ……………………….…………………………...………….. 3 22 a) …………………………………..…………………………… Life on Earth b) ……………………………………………………………….. 4 a) ………………………….……………………………………. b) ………………………………………………………………... 5 a) ………………………………………………………………… b) …………………………….………………………...………… 6 a) ………………………………..………………………………. b) ………………………………………………………………… Check a possible answer. The number of questions asked will vary, based on the features you decide to separate the groups with. Remember to put a “go to” statement at the end of each question to direct the reader of the key to the correct path to follow. Complete Exercise 4.3: Invertebrate classification. Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 23 24 Life on Earth Additional resources Invertebrate groups The protozoans are usually microscopic organisms that move by cilia, flagella or pseudopodia (these are external projections that enable mobility.) Amoeba The Porifera are commonly called the ‘sponges’. These animals have lots of tiny pores and are aquatic. Water is circulated through these pores, transporting food, oxygen and wastes. The animals are sessile, this means that they are permanently attached to Sponge the surfaces on which they are found. The Cnidarians include animals such as the corals, hydra, sea anemones. These animals are aquatic with one opening to the gut through which water is circulated, transporting food, oxygen and waste. These animals possess tentacles that contain nematocyst cells or stinging cells. The body parts are arranged Sea anemone around one central point (radially symmetrical). This means that if it were cut in half the two halves would be mirror images of each other regardless of where you cut through the middle. The Platyhelminthes have flattened bodies. They are commonly called the ‘flat worms’. The body is bilaterally symmetrical (can only be cut in half one way for the two halves to be identical). They are parasitic usually, or can be Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 25 found free living. They posses a mouth but no ‘gut’ as such. Organisms that belong to this group include tapeworms, liver fluke and planarian worms. Liver fluke The Nematodes are commonly called the ‘round worms’ because they posses long, unsegmented bodies. The gut has two openings, a mouth and anus. They are bilaterally symmetrical. Examples of this group are the hookworm, ascaris or threadworm. The Annelids are animals with long segmented bodies. Common examples include the earthworms, leeches and polychaete worms. The gut has two openings. They have well-developed digestive, circulatory and nervous systems. The Mollusca include animals such as the snail, chiton, oyster, squid and octopus. They have soft body parts with a mantle. A protective shell may be secreted to protect this soft tissue. Many molluscs such as snails have a muscular ‘foot’ that is used for locomotion. The animals in this group possess well-developed digestive, circulatory and nervous systems. Sea stars, sea urchins and sea cucumbers belong to a group of organisms called the Echinoderms. These are all marine and have spiny, hard skin on their bodies. They are radially symmetrical and have well-developed digestive and circulatory systems. The Arthropods are a very diverse group and include animals such as the spiders, insects, crustacea, beetles and millipedes. They all possess segmented bodies with jointed appendages such as legs. They have a hard exoskeleton and are bilaterally symmetrical. They possess a ventral nerve cord. 26 Thread worm Leech Chiton Sea star Prawn Life on Earth Suggested answers Constructing dichotomous keys The first division was based on whether the organisms had a backbone. The second division was based on where the organism lived. Other forms of key A: marsupials B: monotreme C: placental Constructing dichotomous key Features in this key include: the presence of a backbone (or absence) and environment (aquatic or terrestrial). Plant classification The algae are placed with the plants in this classification system but in other systems they are placed in the Protista. Group Examples Red algae (Rhodophyta) Diatoms and other single celled algae. Brown algae (Phaeophyta) Green algae (Chlorophyta) Part 4: Classification of life on Earth Characteristics (structural and reproductive) Simple plants without true roots, stems or leaves. No vascular tissue for transporting food and water. No vascular tissue for transporting food and water. Most are aquatic (marine and some freshwater) Single-celled forms can reproduce asexually by binary fission or by producing spores as well as sexually by producing gametes. 27 Bryophytes mosses and liverworts Small plants without true roots. Instead of roots they have simple cellular filaments called rhizoids. Possess simple stems and leaves. No vascular tissue for transporting food and water. Most grow only in moist habitats. Depend on water for sexual reproduction. Mosses have alternation of generations involving gametophyte and sporophyte. Pteridophyta ferns eg. fish-bone, maiden hair, tree fern, bracken fern Have true roots, stems and leaves. Have vascular tissue for food and water transport. Can live in dry as well as moist habitats. Reproduce by rhizomes, spores and gametes. Have an alternation of generations involving sporophyte and gametophyte plants. The gametes require water so that male and female can be transferred. Gymnosperms conifers such as pines; cycads such as Australian burrawang palm. Land plants some of which can grow into large trees. Vascular system well developed. Reproduce by seeds that are uncovered. In most, the uncovered seeds rest on woody scales that are part of a cone. (Seeds are reproductive structures containing an embryo, stores food and a protective cover). Angiosperm (monocots and dicots) 28 all flowering plants, for example eucalyptus, wattle, daisy, daffodil, orchids, grass Vascular system well developed. The reproductive structures are the flowers. Following pollination and fertilisation, seeds are formed, usually enclosed within the fruit which is the ripened ovary. 1 The plant groups have been divided into groups on the basis of their physical structure and method of reproduction. 2 The structure is usually easily seen with the naked eye, such as the presence of roots, stems and leaves, but the reproductive methods may be more difficult to see. Life on Earth Using a plant key A. Bryophyte B. Gymnosperm C. Pterydophyte D. Algae E. Angiosperm Animal classification 1 a) ectothermic…………………………………………….…go to 2 b) endothermic. ……………………………………………..go to 3 2 a) breathe using gills……………………………………….go to 4 b) breathe with lungs……………………………...……….go to 6 3 a) lay eggs……………………………………………………..Aves b) feed young milk………………………………………Mammalia 4 a) cartilage skeleton…………………………………………go to 5 b) bony skeleton…...…………………………………Osteichthyes 5 a) paired fins……………………………………….Chondrichthyes c) 6 no paired fins…………………………………...……….Agnatha a) lay eggs in water………………………………………Amphibia c) lay eggs on land……………...………………………….Reptilia Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 29 30 Life on Earth Exercises – Part 4 Exercise 4.1 to 4.3 Name: _________________________________ Exercise 4.1: Naming organisms a) Explain the need for a classification system. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ b) Define the term hierarchy and explain the system used in biology to assist classification of organisms. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ c) i) Describe the main features of the binomial system in naming organisms. _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 31 ii) Using the binomial names of two similar plants or two similar animals, explain how the names identify the two different organisms. In your answer, include information to show that you understand what genus and species mean. __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Exercise 4.2: Plant classification a) From your identification of Banksia species what criteria were used in this key to distinguish between the species of Banksia? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ b) What are the advantages of this key? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ c) What are some disadvantages of this key? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 32 Life on Earth Exercise 4.3: Invertebrate classification The invertebrate group of animals is characterised by the absence of a backbone. The group is organised into phyla based on structural features. a) Read the descriptions of the invertebrate groups located in the Additional resources. Summarise the distinguishing feature of each group in a table. Part 4: Classification of life on Earth 33 b) Now design a dichotomous key that can be used to identify members of the respective classes. c) What are the advantages of using the binomial classification system? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 34 Life on Earth