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Classification of Living Things Taxonomy Taxonomy • Definition: – The branch of biology that deals with the classification and naming of living things Early Attempts at Classification • Aristotle – animals – based groupings on habitats • air-dwellers, land-dwellers, water-dwellers • Theophrastus – plants – groupings on stem structure • herbs (soft stems), shrubs (several woody stems), trees (one woody stem) • Exploration & Microscopes made these two methods obsolete! Early Attempts at Classification • John Ray – advanced classification via plant studies – first to use term species • Carolus Linnaeus – father of modern taxonomy – developed hierarchy of classification based upon structural similarities – methods are still in use today Classification Categories • Animal Taxonomy – Kings Play Chess On Fine Green Silk • • • • • • • Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species • Plant Taxonomy – Division replaces Phylum Binomial Nomenclature • Definition: a system for naming organisms based upon two words • Naming of organisms used to be extremely confusing – many organisms had multiple, multiple names • Linnaeus “streamlines” by giving each organism a Genus and species name – i.e., Homo sapiens • Eliminates the confusion of so-called “common naming” Modern Taxonomy • Theory of Evolution serves as the basis for modern taxonomic methods – Species: group of like individuals who can breed with each other and produce fertile offspring • species separated for periods of time become different species base upon mutations • Phylogeny – evolutionary history of a species or a group of organisms – similar to a family tree Human Phylogenic Tree Another Human Phylogenic Tree What Things Do We Use to Classify? • Structural Information – skeletal, leaves, etc. • Biochemical Information – DNA, RNA, protein structure, etc. • Cytological Information – cell structure, chromosome number, etc. • Embryological Information – structure in early stages of develpment • Behavior Information – mating calls in crickets, etc. What are the Kingdoms? • “Old School” (Kingdoms) – Monera – Protista – Fungi – Plantae – Animalia • “New School” (Domains) – Archaebacteria – Eubacteria – Eukaryote • Protista • Fungi • Plantae • Animalia Archaebacteria • • • • Live in hostile environments Most in oxygen-free environments Unicellular & prokaryotic Examples – Methanogens – Halophiles – Thermoacidophiles Eubacteria • Make up the majority of modern bacteria • Most are unicellular – chains or colonies • • • • Prokaryotic Most heterotrophic Disease-causing Cyanobacteria Protista • Most are unicellular – some colonial and multicellular • Eukaryotic • Heterotrophic are protozoa • Phototrophic are algae Fungi • Includes molds, yeasts, mushrooms, etc. • Function as either parasites or decomposers of dead matter • Most multicellular, some unicellular • Eukaryotic • Have cell walls but of different chemical structure than plants (chitin v. cellulose) • Cannot photosynthesize • Eat like flies! Various Fungi Plantae • Include mosses, ferns, liverworts, and seed plants • All have cell walls as part of cell structure • Most all are photosynthetic Animalia • More species in this kingdom than all others • All are multicellular with a higher level of organization Animal Phyla • • • • • • • • • Porifera Cnidaria Platyhelminthes Nematoda Annelida Mollusca Arthropoda Echinodermata Chordata Porifera • Includes the sponges Cnidaria • Includes two body forms,: – polyp – medussa Platyhelminthes • Flatworms Nematoda • The Roundworms Annelida • Segmented worms Mollusca • Mollusks – clams, snails slugs Arthropoda • Segmented bodies, exoskeletons – crustaceans – centipedes – millipedes – spiders – insects Echinodermata • Starfish • Sea urchins and cucumbers • Sand dollars Chordata • Spinal cord