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Ch. 17 Organizing Life’s Diversity Biologists have identified and named around 1.3 million species so far, and believe there to be up to 6 -7 million species yet to be discovered! KINGDOM Bacteria.................................... Protoctists (algae, protozoa, etc)......... Animals, vertebrates....................... Animals, invertebrates.................. Fungi...................................... Plants.................................... # OF SPECIES 4,000 80,000 52,000 1,272,000 72,000 270,000 Total number of described species... 1,750,000 Possible # of unknown species:..... 14,000,000 From the United Nations publication: UNEP-WCMC (2000). Global Biodiversity: Earth's living resources in the 21st century. Cambridge, World Conservation Press. Taxonomy – Science and study of classifying organisms. It provides a common, universal scientific language. Taxonomy considers not only physical structure, but also genetics. Taxonomists – Scientists that study the classification of organisms. Classification – placing of information or objects into groups based on certain similarities. Aristotle- (384 - 322 BC Greek philosopher) classified organisms into plants and animals and subdivided plants into herbs, shrubs and trees. He grouped animals according to their habitat and physical differences. problem: did not group organisms according to their evolutionary history – so birds, bats and flying insects were all grouped together. Linnaeus- (1700s Swedish botanist) – developed the system we use today. Based on physical and structural similarities. Groupings revealed relationships between organisms. Came up with the two word system we use today for naming organisms – binomial nomenclature Why do scientists need a naming system? Common names are NOT the same. In UK, buzzards are considered hawks and in the US they are considered vultures. Scientists around the world use the same name! Biologists can clearly communicate with each other, eliminating confusion. binomial nomenclature first word = genus – a group of closely related different species second word = species (specific epithet) – organisms with similar characteristics that can breed with each other and produce fertile offspring. The genus and species (specific epithet) together make the scientific name of the species Homo sapiens (humans), Canis lupus (wolf), Uncia uncia (snow leopard), Felis catus - _____________________ Canis familiaris - ___________________ Genus Ursus contains many closely related species of bears (black bear, polar bear, grizzly bear). Ursus arctos - _________________________ Ursus maritimus - _______________________ Ursus americanus - ______________________ RULES for writing names: (This is very important! From this point forward, I will subtract points if the scientific name is written incorrectly!) 1. In print the name should be italicized and when handwritten needs to be underlined. 2. The first letter of the genus is Upper case and the specific epithet (species) is lower case. 3. Can be abbreviated. i.e. C. lupus 4. scientific names are in Latin – no longer used in conversation so will not change Linnaeus’s system of classification consists of levels, each level is called a taxon (singular) or taxa (plural) Organisms are ranked from broad characteristics to specific. Taxa ANIMALS: Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Examples: PLANTS: Domain Kingdom Division Class Order Family Genus Species Zebra: Eukarya Animalia Chordata Mammalia Perissodactyla Equidae Equus E. zebra Gray wolf: Eukarya Animalia Chordata Mammalia Carnivora Canidae Canis C. lupus Ponderosa pine: Eukarya Plantae Pinophyta Pinopsida Pinales Pinaceae Pinus P. ponderosa As you move up taxa from Species to Kingdom, the groups become larger and organisms are less related. As you move down taxa from Kingdom to Species, the groups become smaller and increasingly more related. Kingdoms contain different Phyla, Phyla contain different Classes, … 3 DOMAINS(Domains categorized by cell type and structure): -BACTERIA- -ARCHAEA- -PROTISTA- 1. Domain: BACTERIA: Kingdom – Bacteria prokaryotes live in most habitats except extreme ones ex. strep throat, pneumonia (however most are harmless, some helpful) microscopic, unicellular lack distinct membrane bound organelles Can be heterotrophs or autotrophs (producers) oldest fossils are 3.4 by old 2. Domain: ARCHAEA (1990) (unicellular prokaryotes): (more ancient than prokaryotes but more closely related to eukaryotic ancestors) Kingdom – Archaea Can be heterotrophs or autotrophs (producers) live in extreme environments (swamps, deep ocean vents, hot springs) ribosomal RNA, cell walls and membranes several hundred species 3. Domain: EUKARYOTES: Kingdom - Protista producers lacks complex organ systems lives in moist environments can be unicellular or multicellular can be plantlike autotrophs or animal-like heterotrophs -FUNGI- -PLANTAE- -ANIMALIA- Kingdom - Fungi (earth’s decomposers – over 50,000 species) heterotrophs do not move from place to place can be unicellular or multicellular absorb nutrients from organic materials in the environment – NOT producers Kingdom - Plantae (more than 250,000 species) producers multicellular photosynthetic do not move from place to place contain chloroplasts and have cell walls composed of cellulose organized into tissues and organ systems Kingdom - Animalia multicellular heterotrophs can move from place to place no cell walls organized into tissues and organ systems Evolutionary relationships are determined by: 1. Structural similarities 2. Breeding behavior 3. Geographical distribution 4. Chromosome comparisons 5. Biochemistry Characters - inherited features that vary among species. Used for classification. a. morphological - homologous structures indicate descent from a common ancestor b. biochemical – DNA and RNA Phylogeny – evolutionary history of a species Cladistics – system of classification that groups organisms together by shared characteristics. Models: a. Cladogram – model of phylogeny of a species b. fanlike