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Classification of Living Things Chapter 20 Taxonomy • Identifying, naming and classifying organisms • Latin base • Aristotle – first to classify, divided into 14 major Categories – Subdivided them according to size • John Ray – All organisms should have a set name – Divided them into groups based on how he thought they were related Carolus Linnaeus 1707 - 1778 • Binomial nomenclature – 2 part name – Genus – contains many species – Specific epithet (1 species) • Usually descriptive, can have geographic descriptions • When writing a scientific name – Genus capitalized – Species lower case – Italics, underlined if handwritten Published Systema Naturae in 1735 species • Interbreed and share the same gene pool • Subspecies – Variant types of organisms of a species that tend to interbreed where their populations overlap • They could actually be different species • hydridization Classification categories • • • • • • • • • • Species Genus Family Order Class Phylum Kingdom Domain More than 30 categories: super, sub, infra Organisms put in categories based on characters, structural, chromosomal, or molecular features Phylogenetic trees • Systematics – study of the diversity of organisms at all levels of organization – Taxonomy and classification – Goal: determine phylogeny – evolutionary history • Represented by Phylogenetic tree • Shows divergence from a common ancestor • Derived characters – individual characteristics Tracing phylogeny • Record data from: – Fossil evidence – Homology – Molecular data • Using this information you can determine common ancestors and classify organisms accordingly Homology • Includes comparative anatomy and embryological evidence • Sometimes homology is challenging because of – Convergent evolution – having the same or similar characters but distantly related due to adaptation to the environment • Analogous structures – having same function but do not have common ancestor (wings of bat/insect) – Parallel evolution – similarity in structure in related groups that cannot be traced to common ancestor Molecular data • Protein comparisons - limited • RNA and DNA Comparisons – DNA-DNA hybridization: compare single strands from different organisms and allowed to combine, if closely related, strands will stick together – Nucleotide sequences • Molecular clocks – nucleic acid changes used to indicate relatedness and evolutionary time Cladistic Systematics • Willi Hennig • Uses shared derived characters to classify organisms and construct a cladogram • Objective because it lists characters used to construct cladogram • Figure 20.11, table 20.2 Phenetic systematics • Species are classified by the number of their similarities • Count the # of traits the two species share and estimate the degree of relatedness • Figure 20.10 Traditional systematics • Mainly use anatomical data to classify organisms • Stress common ancestry and degree of structural difference among divergent groups • Not as strict as cladists Classification systems • Began with 2 kingdoms: animal and plant • 1880 Ernst Haeckel: – Added kingdom Protista – unicellular, microscopic • 1969: RH Whittaker – expanded system to 5 kingdoms: monera, protista, fungi, plantae and animalia – Based on type of cell, complexity, type of nutrition 3 Domain system • Late 1970’s Carl Woese • Used rRNA sequencing • Proposed 2 groups of prokaryotes because they were so different • Domains: – Archea – prokaryotes that are not bacteria – Bacteria – mostly prokaryotic bacteria – Eukarya – contains Protista, Fungus, Plantae and Animalia