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I. Classification A. History of classifying 1. Aristotle a) First to classify living things (350 B.C.). b) Divided into 2 groups: animals and plants. c) Animals: habitat and behavior. d) Plants: size and structure. e) System used for 2000 yrs. (why was it discarded?) 2. Carolus Linnaeus a) 1700’s; new classification based on similar structures. 1 b) Suggested terms genus and species. c) Called binomial nomenclature – two word naming system (genus and species). d) Used the Latin language. e) Ex: humans: genus: homo species: sapiens II. Modern Classification A. Taxonomy – study of the classification systems. 1. Divides organisms into six kingdoms. 2. DNA is the newest technique of helping classifying organism. 2 B. Classifying order 1. Kingdom (very general) K King 2. Phylum P Phillip 3. Class C Came 4. Order O Over 5. Family F From 6. Genus G Great 7. Species (specific) S Spain C. Writing scientific names 1. Scientific name – consists of genus and species and must be underlined or italicized. a)Ex: humans Homo sapiens Homo sapiens b)Genus is always capitalized but species is not. 3 D. Dichotomous keys 1. Series of paired statements that describe physical characteristics of different organisms. 2. Simplifies classification. 3. Lab on page 462-63. III. Reproduction A. Sexual reproduction – two cells from different parents unite to produce the first cell of the new organism. 1. Ex: sperm + egg = zygote B. Asexual reproduction – new organism has a single parent. 1. Binary fission – prokaryote (w/o a nucleus) copies its DNA and divides in half. 4 2. Conjugation – hollow bridge forms between two cells and genes move from one cell to the other. a) Figure 19-7 page 476 shows both binary fission and conjugation. IV. Life Cycles A. Alternation of Generations (plants) 1. 2 stages / generations a) Gametophyte stage – produces gametes which are haploid (1N). b) Sporophyte stage – produces spores after two haploid gametes fuse (diploid 2N). 5 2. Figure 20-18 page 514 6 B. Metamorphosis (Insects) 1. Incomplete metamorphosis – a)3 stages: egg, nymph, and adult b)Insects emerge from the egg as a nymph (small version of adult w/o wings). c)As the nymph matures, reproductive organs appear and wings (adult). d)Ex: cinch bugs 2. Complete metamorphosis – a)4 stages: egg, larva, pupa, adult b)Egg hatches into a larva, which cannot fly. c)Insects builds a cocoon (pupa) and undergoes a drastic change. d)Fully formed, sexually mature adult emerges. 7 e)Ex: bees, moths, beetles 3. Figure 28-18 page 729 8 V. Comparative Anatomy A. Position Terms 1. Dorsal – back surface. 2. Ventral – underbelly, lower surface. 3. Anterior – front / head of the organism. 4. Posterior – tail / hind end of the organism. B. Symmetry – balanced arrangement of body parts around a point or a line. 1. Bilateral symmetry – each side is a mirror image of the other. a) Ex: humans, fish, birds, reptiles 2. Radial symmetry – appendages are arranged around a central axis. a) Ex: starfish, octopus 9 3. Spherical symmetry – animals with a round form. a) It has no front, back, right or left. b) Ex: protozoa, bacteria. 4. Asymmetrical – has no symmetry. a) Ex: amoeba. VI. Characteristics of Organisms A. Levels of Development 1. The higher the organism, then the more complex it is. 2. Figure 18-12 page 459 shows the breakdown of each kingdom and its characteristics. 10 11 VII. Organ systems in organisms. A. Characteristics of each system. 1. Nervous system – coordinates the body’s response to changes in its internal and external environment. a) Brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves. 2. Integumentary system – serves as a barrier against infection and injury. a) Skin, hair, nails, sweat glands 3. Respiratory system – provides oxygen needed for cellular respiration and removes excess carbon dioxide from the body. a) Nose, pharynx, larynx, trachea, lungs. 12 4. Digestive system – converts foods into simpler molecules that can be used by the cells of the body. a)Mouth, stomach, small and large intestine. 5. Excretory system – eliminates waste products of metabolism from the body. a)Lungs, kidneys, bladder and urethra. 6. Skeletal system – supports and protects the body. a)Bones, cartilage, ligaments, tendons. 7. Muscular system – produces voluntary movement and helps circulate blood. a)Skeletal, smooth, and cardiac muscle. 13 8. Circulatory system – brings oxygen, nutrients, and hormones to cells. a)Heart, blood, blood vessels. 9. Endocrine system – controls growth, development, metabolism, reproduction. a)Pituitary, thyroid, pancreas, ovaries and testes. 10.Reproductive system – produces reproductive cells, in females, nurtures and protects the embryo. a)Testes, penis, ovaries, uterus, vagina, Fallopian tubes. 11.Lymphatic system – helps protect the body from disease. a)White blood cells, spleen, lymph nodes, lymph vessels. 14 Figure 35-2 page 892 – 893 15 Figure 35-2 continued 16 Figure 35-2 concluded 17