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N O I T A C I S F I M S S S NI A CL RGA O VO • • BU CA RY LA RT HA C -L W K- F O G N I V LI CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Misconceptions Viruses cause diseases, so they must be alive CHARACTERISTICS OF LIVING ORGANISMS 1. Living Things are Composed of Cells Cell theory 2. Living Things Have Different Levels of Organization Cell – tissue – organ- organ system 3. Living Things Use Energy Living things take in energy and use it for maintenance and growth. 4. Living Things Respond To Their Environment Living things will make changes in response to a stimulus in their environment. A behavior is a complex set of responses. Source: http://infohost.nmt.edu/~klathrop/7characterisitcs_of_life.htm CHARACTERISTICS OF LIVING ORGANISMS 5. Living Things Grow Cell division - the orderly formation of new cells. Cell enlargement - the increase in size of a cell. Cells grow to a certain size and then divide. An organism gets larger as the number of its cells increases. 6. Living Things Reproduce Reproduction is not essential for the survival of individual organisms, but must occur for a species to survive. 7. Living Things Adapt To Their Environment Adaptations are traits giving an organism an advantage in a certain environment. Variation of individuals is important for a healthy species. Source: http://infohost.nmt.edu/~klathrop/7characterisitcs_of_life.htm CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification schemes Life is subdivided by this scheme: Domain Kingdom Phylum (plural: phyla) Class Order Family Genus (plural: genera) Species These may be remembered by the mnemonic “Dear King Phillip Came Over For Great Spaghetti” CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification schemes There are three domains Domain Archaea Domain Bacteria Domain Eukarya CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification schemes There are six kingdoms within the domains Domain Archeae Kingdom Archaebacteria Domain Bacteria Kingdom Eubacteria Domain Eukarya Kingdom Animalia Kingdom Plantae Kingdom Fungi Kingdom Protista CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification schemes You may encounter additional subdivisions created by using prefixes ‘Super’ or ‘Sub’ at any classification level Other subdivisions include ‘Division’, ‘Tribe’ and ‘Variety’ CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Naming rules Names of kingdoms, phyla, classes, orders, families and genera are capitalized Names of species are always in lower case Genus and species are written with an underline or in italics Example: Homo sapiens sapiens or Homo sapiens sapiens (humans) CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Determining classification If you find an organism, you can use a key to determine it’s classification If there are two choices at each branch, the key is dichotomous (more than two choices at each branch gives a polychotomous key). Here are two types of keys Spider key (graphic) Numbered key (text) CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Part of a spider key to identify trees by their leaves CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS A numbered key to identify oak trees 1a. Leaves usually without teeth or lobes: 2 1b. Leaves usually with teeth or lobes: 5 2a. Leaves evergreen: 3 2b. Leaves not evergreen: 4 3a. Mature plant a large tree — Southern live oak Quercus virginiana 3b. Mature plant a small shrub — Dwarf live oak Quercus minima 4a. Leaf narrow, about 4-6 times as long as broad — Willow oak Quercus phellos 4b. Leaf broad, about 2-3 times as long as broad — Shingle oak Quercus imbricaria 5a. Lobes or teeth bristle-tipped: 6 5b. Lobes or teeth rounded or blunt-pointed, no bristles: 7 6a. Leaves mostly with 3 lobes — Blackjack oak Quercus marilandica 6b. Leaves mostly with 7-9 lobes — Northern red oak Quercus rubra 7a. Leaves with 5-9 deep lobes — White oak Quercus alba 7b. Leaves with 21-27 shallow lobes — Swamp chestnut oak Quercus prinus CLASSWORK 1 Copy the questions into your notebook (right-side) and answer them 1. Describe the two types of identification keys 2. List the three domains of life 3. Describe (one sentence each) the seven characteristics of living organisms 4. What does “Dear King Phillip Came Over For Great Spaghetti” remind us of? 5. List the three domains and the kingdoms each includes CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Kingdom Archaebacteria unicellular organisms lacking a nucleus and cell organelles have independent evolutionary history and biochemistry than Eubacteria include five phyla sometimes found in extreme environments (high temperature, high salt) may produce methane CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Kingdom Archaebacteria In 1983, scientists tool samples from a spot deep in the Pacific Ocean where hot gases and molten rock boiled into the ocean form the Earth’s interior. To their surprise they discovered unicellular (one cell) organisms in the samples. http://www.ric.edu/faculty/ptiskus/Six_Kingdoms/Index.htm CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification of an extreme halophile Kingdom Archaebacteria Phylum Euryarchaeota Class Halobacteria Order Halobacteriales Family Halobacteriaceae Genus Halobacterium Species salinarum CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Kingdom Eubacteria Bacteria unicellular microorganisms reproduce by binary fission most have cell wall may or may not have outer layer of peptidoglycan CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Kingdom Eubacteria http://danmarkltd.tripod.com/taxonomy/id6.html CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Some Kingdom Eubacteria phyla Phylum Cyanobacteria - blue-green algae. Phylum Spirochaete: helically coiled cells. They also have flagella that allow them to move in a twisting motion. Phylum Proteobacteria: mostly anaerobic organisms. Most have flagella to move around, but some can move by gliding, which means they can move by themselves. http://www.angelfire.com/ks3/lditton/eubacteria.html CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification of bacterium that produces Botox Kingdom Eubacteria Phylum Firmicutes Class Clostridia Order Clostridiales Family Clostridiaceae Genus Clostridium Species botulinum CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Kingdom Animalia The animals; have cells with nucleus but no cell wall or chloroplasts Some animals (vertebrates) have backbones All other animals (invertebrates) lack backbones CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Some phyla of kingdom Animalia Phylum Porifera – sponges Phylum Cnidaria – corals and jellyfish Phylum Annelida – segmented worms (earthworms and leeches) Phylum Nematoda – roundworms CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS More phyla of kingdom Animalia Phylum Arthropoda – insects, crabs, lobsters, shrimp, spiders, scorpions, centipedes, ticks Phylum Mollusca – oysters, clams, octopi, squids Phylum Echinodermata – starfish, sea urchins, sea cucumbers CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS More phyla of kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata – fish, sharks, rays, amphibians, reptiles, bird and mammals (all are vertebrates) CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification of humans Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Primata Family Hominideae Genus Homo Species sapiens Subspecies sapiens This may be remembered by the mnemonic “All Cool Men Prefer Having Heavy SideburnS” CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Kingdom Plantae Plants, including Trees Herbs Bushes Grasses Ferns Mosses Green algae CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Some Kingdom Plantae phyla Phylum Chlorophyta – green algae Phylum Bryophyta – mosses Phylum Pteridophyta – ferns and horsetails Phylum Pinophyta – conifers Phylum Magnoliophyta – flowering plants CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification of Southern live oak Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Plantae Magnoliophyta Magnoliopsida Fagales Fagaceae Quercus virginiana CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Kingdom Fungi yeasts, molds, mushrooms eukaryotic organisms chitinous cell wall some produce hyphae, some are single-celled reproduction commonly by spores CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Some Kingdom Fungi phyla Phylum Ascomycota – truffles, cup fungi, yeasts Phylum Basidiomycota - mushrooms, puffballs, bracket fungi, chanterelles, smuts, rusts CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification of button mushroom Kingdom Phylum Class Subclass Order Family Genus Species Fungi Basidiomycota Agaricomycetes Homobasidiomycetideae Agaricales Agaricaceae Agaricus bisporus CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Kingdom Protista Includes amoebas, forams, most algae, and slime molds Some unicellular, others are colonial, and yet others are multicellular all eukaryotes (they have a true nucleus). all need some kind of a water-based environment-which can be fresh or marine water, snow, damp soil, polar bear hairs--in which to live CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Some Kingdom Protista phyla Phylum Rhizopoda - amoebas Phylum Rhodophyta – red algae, multicellular and marine-dwelling, but are more typically found in tropical zones and deeper in the ocean (Nori) Phylum Apicomplexa – parasites that form tiny, infectious spores (Plasmodium) Phylum Zoomastigophora – free-living, symbionts and parasites (such as trypanosomes) CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS More Kingdom Protista phyla Phylum Phaeophyta – brown algae, multicellular and live in marine, temperate zone, coastal areas (kelp) Phylum Chlorophyta – green algae (Volvox, Spirogyra) Phylum Ciliophora – solitary, fresh water organisms and use cilia to move (Paramecium) Phylum Myxomycota – slime molds, “body” is a giant, multinucleate mass of cytoplasm CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Classification of a protist that causes malaria Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Protista Apicomplexa Aconoidasida Haemosporida Plasmodiidae Plasmodium falciparum CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING ORGANISMS Viruses and prions Viruses cause diseases such as the common cold, influenza, herpes, chickenpox and AIDS Prions cause diseases as deer wasting disease, scrapie (sheep) and bovine spongiform encephalitis (mad cow disease) Viruses and prions can cause infectious disease but are not considered to be living organisms However, they still have classification CLASSWORK 2 Copy the questions into your notebook (right-side) and answer them 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Are viruses living organisms? Do animal cells have cell walls? Phylum of flowering plants Phylum of vertebrates Genus and species of the organism that causes malaria 6. How do bacteria reproduce? CLASSWORK 2 Copy the questions into your notebook (right-side) and answer them 7. List the kingdom, phylum and class to which dogs and cats belong (same as humans) 8. Humans are Homo sapiens sapiens. List the order and family to which they belong. 9. List the six kingdoms and state what they include 10. Fish are in the phylum Chordata – do they have backbones?