Download ORGANIZING LIFE`S DIVERSITY

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
ORGANIZING LIFE’S
DIVERSITY
Chapter 17 Classification
Classification is…
 A way of grouping
objects together
based on similarities
 In the beginning--plants were grouped
based on people
who ate them—
 Edible
 Non-edible
 The history of the
Tomato-1820
Colonel Robert
Gibbon Johnson
announced that at
noon on September
26, he would eat a
basket of tomatoes
in front of the Salem
NY courthouse—aka
“love apple”
Scientists Who Developed
Classification
Aristotle: Greek Philosopher

Developed 1st
method of
classification
 Classified into 2
major groups
1. Plants: herbs,
shrubs or trees
2. Animals: According
to where they lived:
land, water or air
Carolus Linnaeus
 Plants: based on
 Methods still used
today
 Selected physical
characteristics
based on close
relationships of
organisms
reproductive
structures
 Animals: based on
evolutionary traits
Carolus Linnaeus
 Invented the 2-word
naming system to
identify species
 called BINOMIAL
NOMENCLATURE:
Bi (2) Nomial (name)

Scientific Name:
1. Genus: 1st word:
consist of closely
related species
2. Species: 2nd word:
consist of
description of the
species.
RULES OF BINOMAL
NOMEMCLATURE
1. Genus is ALWAYS
capitalized & is 1st
2. Species is
ALWAYS
lowercase & is 2nd
3. BOTH ARE
ITALICIZED OR
UNDERLINED!!!
Homo sapiens
Felix tigerus
F. leo
F. domestica
Scientific & Common Names
 Many organisms have
common names that can
be misleading.
 Example: a sea horse is a
fish, not a horse.
 Also, it is confusing when a
species has more than one
common name.
Common
Names
 Do not tell you how
organisms are
related or classified
 Can be misleading
 Confusion can occur
when organisms
have more than one
name
 All newly discovered
species are given
Latin names
because it is no
longer used
Taxonomy is…
 Taxonomy (tak SAH nuh mee) is the branch
of biology that groups and names organisms
based on studies of their different
characteristics
 Biologists who study taxonomy are called
taxonomists
Taxonomists
 Is a useful tool – if a child has eaten a
mushroom & You do not know whether
it is poisonous…
 Important to the economy- often
discover new sources of lumber,
medicines & energy…
Dichotomous Key
 Organisms can be
identified easily by
using a dichotomous
key
 Animals around the
world use the same
identification system
 A key is made up of
sets of numbered
statements. Each set
deals with a single
characteristic of an
organism, such as leaf
shape or arrangement
Using a dichotomous key to identify
money!
How are living things
Classified?
Felix tigerus
Order of Taxa
 A group of organisms is
called a taxon (plural,
taxa
 The smallest taxon is
species. Organisms that
look alike and
successfully interbreed
belong to the same
species.
 The next largest taxon
is a genus—a group of
similar species that
have similar features
and are closely related
Mountain
lion
Taxonomic rankings
 Compare the appearance of a lynx, Lynx
rufus, a bobcat, Lynx canadensis, and a
mountain lion, Panthera concolor.
Mountain
lion
Lynx
Bobcat
Order of Taxa
 Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family,
Genus, & Species
 Can you remember it this way?
 King Phillip Came Over For Graduation
Saturday.
Domain
Eukarya
Kingdom
Animalia
Chordata
Phylum
Class
Mammalia
Carnivora
Order
Family
Genus
Felidae
Lynx
SpeciesLynx Lynx
rufus canadensis
Bobcat Lynx
Introduction to Classification
6 kingdoms of life
6 Kingdoms of Life
Monerans
 The Monerans, are
cells that lack a
nucleus, are
microscopic and
unicellular
 some are
chemosynthetic, where
others are
photosynthetic.
• Most of these
environments are
oxygen-free.
2 groups of Monerans
 Archaebacteria
 Eubacteria
Protists
 Some are plantlike
 some are animal-
like
 Some are funguslike
Fungi
 Unicellular or
multi-cellular
eukaryote that
absorbs nutrients
from organic
materials in the
environment
Plants
 contain chloroplasts
and have cell walls
 There are more
than 250,000
known species of
plants
Animals
 Animals are
multicellular
heterotrophs
 Nearly all are able
to move from place
to place.
 Animal cells do not
have cell walls