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ANIMAL CLASSIFICATION I. TAXONOMY identification and classification • Carl Linnaeus 1758 Physician to King of Sweden • Binomial Nomenclature • named and described all that was known to Europeans • Based his system on physical features and biogeography HERE’S THE REASONING • - grouped according to physical similarities • - physical similarities is a result of genetics • - genetics reflects common ancestry Phylogeny- shows evolutionary relationships • - phylogenetic tree • - shared common ancestor is a link • - time is usually present - time is usually present Creating a phylogenetic tree based on amino acid differences in hemoglobin • • • • • • • • PRACTICE EXAMPLE Organism A 0 B 5 C 17 D 8 E 3 F 34 Creating a phylogenetic tree based on amino acid differences in hemoglobin • • • • • • • • PRACTICE EXAMPLE Organism A 0 B 5 C 17 D 8 E 3 F 34 • • • • • • • • Do you get the same “tree” using data from anatomy and data from biochemistry? A B C D E F G H 0 11 45 1 9 31 21 14 Do you get the same “tree” using data from anatomy and data from biochemistry? MAN FUNGI DUCK RABBIT MOTH SNAKE MONKEY TUNA • • • • • • • • Do you get the same “tree” using data from anatomy and data from biochemistry? A B C D E F G H 0 11 45 1 9 31 21 14 MAN DUCK FUNGI MONKEY RABBIT MOTH TUNA SNAKE PATTERNS OF EVOLUTION • MORPHOLOGICAL DIVERGENCE related organisms become less similar due to different environmental circumstances . Develop features to suit their habitat • MORPHOLOGICAL CONVERGENCE organisms may have similar features but are unrelated. This results from being exposed to similar environmental conditions • (ex. wombat vs. ground hog ) B. WHAT IS A SPECIES? (show powerpoint examples of hybrids) • Biological - can interbreed – exceptions zedonk, tiglons, orchids, Ligers, peekapoo • Morphological- members look similar to each other • (be careful about convergence) • cacti and euphorbia • frogs species (dif. Behaviors) Wolf/dog hybrid Liger or tiglon Zonkey or zedonk Rat/squirrel hybrid Llamal llama/camel hybrid Wholphin Modern Species definition • species- organisms that look similar and can interbreed in nature to produce fertile offspring (implies living close together) II. MODERN EVIDENCE (used to create groups) • • • • • • • - comparative anatomy - cell structure - Biogeography - development "embryology" - biochemistry - paleontology - DNA III. The FOSSIL RECORD (HOW IS EVIDENCE EXPOSED?) • Erosion • Mining, digging • Uplift III. The FOSSIL RECORD (HOW IS EVIDENCE EXPOSED?) • Erosion • Mining, digging • Uplift 2 IMPORTANT LOCATIONS • Edia Cara Hills Australia • Burgess Shale (British Columbia) Canada Classifying ancient species EDIA CARA HILLS (Australia) • - not much on origins • - 630 mybp preserved burrows and few soft bodied animals BURGESS SHALE (Canada) • --570 mybp Burgess Shale in southern British Columbia • -all phyla represented simultaneously? 630 million years ago Ediacara Hills SOFT BODIES FLATWORMS British Columbia, Canada Burgess Shale 570 million years ago Land Slide ! • Covered large region quickly Fossils Today the sea floor is uplifted Where does this occur today? • in locations like ???? • Extinct volcanoes, islands, thermal vents, Death Valley (oasis) Or… • Mass extinctions- opportunities for ADAPATIVE RADIATION • Variations already exist in the phyla • Burst of rapid evolution of a lineage, resulting in formation of new species in a wide range of habitats The Rate of Evolution • Gradualism-(Darwin) small changes accumulate over a long period of time. (Transitional fossils would be expected) • Punctuated Equilibrium- (Stephen J. Gould) long periods of uneventful time passes until a catastrophe creates opportunities for new species to flourish. Little change is punctuated by rapid evolution of new species. QUIZ TOPICS • Evaluate or create a phylogenetic tree • Taxonomic hierarchy • Significance of Edia Cara Hills and Burgess Shale