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The Tree of Life Chapter 26 Why classify organisms? 1. Order and organization 2. Common names confusing • Ex. Jellyfish, starfish, etc. 3. Common names vary from place to place • Ex. Cougar, puma, mountain lion 2 Aristotle divided organisms into two groups: Plants 1.)herbs 2.)shrubs 3.)trees Animals 1.)air 2.)sea 3.)land 3 Linneaus: founder of modern taxonomy • Classified organisms based on structural features • Binomial Nomenclature: each species is given a two-word Latin name 1st word = genus 2nd word = species Ex: canis familiaris felis domesticus homo sapiens 4 The Linnaean Hierarchy Taxa are based on shared characteristics -Domain (most shared) -Kingdom -Phylum -Class -Order -Family -Genus -Species (least shared) 5 6 7 Classification of Organisms Taxonomy: the science of classifying living things -A classification level is called a taxon - taxonomic key: used to identify species, by following a series of choices between characteristics 8 9 Grouping Organisms 3 domains: -Bacteria -Archaea -Eukarya Archaea and Eukarya are more closely related to each other than to bacteria 10 11 Domain: Bacteria kingdom: Eubacteria • • • • Unicellular Prokaryotic, Cell walls with peptidoglycan Some heterotrophic, some autotrophic Most abundant organisms on Earth • Ex: E. coli, Streptococcus, many diseases 12 Domain: Archaea kingdom: archaebacteria • • • • Unicellular Prokaryotic, Cell walls lack peptidoglycan Most heterotrophic, some autotrophs Includes methanogens, extremophiles 13 Eukarya • Eukaryotes appeared about 2.5 BYA • Key characteristics: – Complex cell organization – Multicellular – Sexual reproduction 14 Mitochondria and chloroplasts most likely gained entry by endosymbiosis -Mitochondria were derived from purple nonsulfur bacteria -Chloroplasts from cyanobacteria 15 16 Eukaryote Kingdoms 1. Protista • Unicellular (some multi) • Most are heterotrophic • Ex: simple algae, giant kelp, amoeba, paramecium (Catchall for eukaryotes that are not plant, fungus or animal) 17 2. Fungi • Multicellular (some uni) • Heterotrophic by absorption • Ex: yeast, mold, mushrooms, athlete’s foot 18 3. Plants • Multicellular • Autotrophic • Ex: trees, ferns, tulips, some algae 19 Land plants arose from an ancestral green alga, and only once during evolution 20 4. Animals • Multicellular • Heterotrophic by ingestion • Ex: insects, worms, vertebrates 21 Molecular systematics is leading to a revision of evolutionary relationships among animals 22 23 24 Viruses Are not organisms and so cannot be placed in any of the kingdoms Are literally “parasitic” chemicals -DNA or RNA wrapped in protein Can only reproduce within living cells Vary greatly in appearance and size 25