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CLASSIFICATION OF LIFE Terms To Know • Prokaryote: – Simple cells that have no nucleus • Eukaryote: – Complex cells, with a nucleus and many organelles • Unicellular: – Organisms made of one cell • Multicellular: – Organisms made of two or more cells • Autotroph: – Producers who make their own food • Heterotroph: – Consumers who get energy from other sources besides themselves 3 Domains, 6 Kingdoms Taxonomy: The science of identifying and classifying into related groups Taxon: a group Taxa Binomial Nomenclature • A two-word scientific name assigned to every species • Assigned by the Genus species • Examples: – Homo sapiens – Acer rubrum – Panthera tigris Genus is always capitalized, species is lower case 3 Domains, 6 Kingdoms Bacteria • All of the unicellular prokaryotes • Can be autotrophic or heterotrophic • Examples: Streptococcus, E-Coli, Cyanobacteria Eubacteria vs. Archaebacteria (2 separate domains and kingdoms) • Eubacteria – Contain most types of bacteria – Found in nearly all conditions • Archaebacteria – Found in unusual conditions: volcanic vents and hot springs – Have unusual lipids in their cell membranes E-Coli (Eubacteria) Streptococcus pyogenes (Strep Throat) Eubacteria Kingdom Protista • Typically unicellular • Many of the exceptions to the rules – You’ll know it’s a Protista if it doesn’t fit any other category – Cell walls in some, some have chloroplasts – Most unicellular, some multi-cellular – Autotroph or heterotroph Amoeba Paramecium Slime Molds Kingdom Fungi • Heterotrophs with cell walls • Most are multi-cellular (mushrooms) but some are unicellular (yeast) Mushrooms Club Fungi Kingdom Plantae • Multicellular autotrophs with cell walls Mosses Ferns Flowering Plants Trees Kingdom Animalia • Multicellular heterotrophs with no cell walls Coral Insects Fish Birds Amphibians and Reptiles Mammals Viruses • Viruses are not listed because viruses are not living! • Viruses are a piece of DNA or RNA contained by protein; they are not cells. • Viruses require a cell from one of the kingdoms above to reproduce. Representing Evolutionary Relationships: Phylogenetic Tree: - Scientific tree showing evolutionary history - shows relationships thought to exist between groups or organisms Representing Evolutionary Relationships: Cladogram: - Uses shared derived traits - Derived traits indicate divergence from a common ancestor