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Classification Systems Shape Activity • First, Cut out the Shapes • Arrange shapes into groups –You must have at least 4 groups • Give each group a name • Give each shape within the group a name –Glue the groups on to the paper in their own section • Wait for discussion Why Classify? • Name organisms • Group them in a logical manner Taxonomy • The science of classifying organisms and assigning each one a universally accepted name – Scientific Naming – Binomial Nomenclature • Name consists of the Genus and species • Why a Scientific Name…. Common Name Different Animal • American Opossum Australian Possum Same Animal different common name • Depending on the region • called striped mullet, black mullet, flathead grey mullet Scientific Name (Binomial Nomenclature) Example: Red Maple (this is the common name) • Acer rubrum (italicized or underlined) – Acer, is the genus (the latin word for maple) – rubrum is the species (rubrum is the latin word for red) Why is it important to have a scientific name and not just a common name? Biological Classification • Linnaeus developed this system and placed living things into levels of classification. – Based his system on specific traits – Includes more groups than older systems • Each level is called a taxon (taxa) Linnaeus’ Classification System • • • • • • • Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Use a mnemonic to help you • King Phillip Came Over For Good Soup Kingdom • The largest group • Contains several phyla Example: Kingdom Animalia consumers, multicellular,eukaryotes (a) A sea star Phylum • Includes several classes • Includes a large number of different organisms. • The organisms share some important basic characteristics • Example: Phylum Chordata • Includes mammals, birds, fishes, amphibians and reptiles What do these animals have in common? Class • A group of closely related orders Example: Mammalia (covered with fur, warmblooded, nurse their young) Order • Several families of similar organisms – Example: Carnivora, includes cats, dogs, , etc. – Carnivores are meat-eaters Family • Larger than a genus – Contains several related genera – Example: Lions, tigers, cheetahs (all catlike animals belong in the family Felidae) Genus • Species that share common characteristics – Example: Felis (contains the common house cat as well as the cougar and puma. (Small cats.) – Have similar teeth, feet, and claws Species • Population of organisms that share similar characteristics and that can breed with one another and produce fertile offspring – Example: catus (a tame cat) Kingdom • When first introduced all phyla belonged to either the Kingdom Animalia or Plantae • The scientific view of life was not as complex in Linnaeus’s time Early Classification • Traits used to separate Animals from Plants – Animals were mobile, used food for energy – Plants were green and photosynthetic • Two Kingdoms were not enough to logically include all organisms The Six-Kingdom System • Animalia • Plantae • Fungi – Yeast, mushrooms and molds • Protista – Many microorganisms • Bacteria • Archae The Three-Domain System • The Domain is larger than a Kingdom • Scientists have used molecular analyses to group organisms into domains – Note: This was not part of Linnaeus’ System • The Three Domains: • Bacteria • Archaea • Eukarya – Eukaryota Domain - Bacteria Kingdom Bacteria ( common bacteria) • Characteristics – Prokaryote (no nucleus) – Composition of cell wall different from archaebacteria – Unicellular – Autotroph, heterotroph or chemotrophic (energy from chemicals) • HONORS • Contain peptidoglycan in cell wall • Peptidoglycan is a sugar polymer. These bacteria are less complex and easier to treat. • Escherichia coli Streptococcus Domain Archaea Kingdom Archaea ( Archa – means “initial”, also known as extreme bacteria) • Characteristics – Prokaryote – More complex cell wall composition – Unicellular – Autotroph, heterotroph or chemotrophic (energy from chemicals) Halophile’s (salt loving bacteria) in the Sierra Navada (aerial view) • Halophile bacteria in Lake Natron, Tanzania Thermophiles – heat loving. Live near volcanoes. Mt.St Helens • Methanogens – live with no oxygen – • make methane gas (natural gas or swamp gas) Domain Eukarya Kingdom Protista • Characteristics – Eukaryote (contain a nucleus) – Most unicellular (some multicellular) – Autotroph or heterotroph https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zsdYOgTbOk Examples of Protists • Amoeba euglena Paramecium Giant Kelp and sea weeds Sporozoites – parasite causes malaria Slime mold Domain Eukarya Kingdom Fungi • Characteristics – Eukaryote – Cell walls made of chitin • Material that makes up exoskeleton of insects and arthropods. – Most multicellular (some unicellular) Heterotroph https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YyUWa84bGgA Examples of Fungi Mushrooms, puffballs, shelf fungi Athlete’s foot and ringworm Yeast – Only unicellular fungi Domain Eukarya Kingdom Plantae • Characteristics – Eukaryote – Have Cell walls made of cellulose – Contain chloroplasts – Multicellular – autotroph • • • • Bryophytes – Nonvascular plants https://safeshare.tv/x/ss5887b6fe44aea Ferns – vascular seedless https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c4YtOT 0Z6Ek • Seed plants - Gymnosperms • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKnrlUI8 5ys • Seed plants – flowering plants angiosperms https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ph7Ex8rQ Examples of Plants Mosses, and ferns the seedless plants Flowering seed plants Seed plants/nonflowering - conifers Domain Eukarya Kingdom Animalia • Characteristics – Eukaryote – No cell walls or chloroplasts – Multicellular – heterotroph • Examples of Animals Problems with Classification • Which characteristics are more important? – Those we can see…. – Or those we can’t Classifying only observable traits can pose problems Think about it. • Linnaeus tried to group organisms according to biologically important characteristics • This was more than a century before Darwin’s ideas about evolution. – And how organisms are related What is the problem with classifying based on body structure comparisons? • Barnacles and limpets would be grouped together The problem is…which similarities and differences are most important? Grouping based on the lines of evolutionary descent Darwin’s theory of evolution changed the way biologists thought about classification Crabs and barnacles are more closely related and are grouped together. Organisms are grouped into categories that represent lines of evolutionary descent, not just physical similarities Evolutionary Classification • Phylogeny-the study of how living and extinct organisms are related to one another. • The strategy is to group organisms together based on their evolutionary history (evolutionary classification) – Look at their evolutionary descent rather than similarities and differences Bozeman Science Phylogenies https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQwI90bkJl4 Evolutionary Classification • Common Ancestors – Phylogenetic systematics places organisms into higher taxa – The larger a taxon is, the farther back in time its members shared a common ancestor. Phylogeny Example Cladogram • Classifying organisms according to these rules places them into groups called clades • Clade – is a group of species that includes a single common ancestor and all descendants of that ancestor – living and extinct. At each juncture is a new evolutionary trait Cladogram example of barnacles and limpets • Similarities in DNA and RNA • Similarities in DNA can be used to help determine classification and evolutionary relationships • DNA of different organisms can be “read” and compared to trace the history of genes. • They are useful because all organisms have either DNA or RNA Comparing DNA of different species. The more similarities in the DNA sequence, the more closely related the species.