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Classification and The Tree of Life Unit 1: Chap 25-26 Classification/Taxonomy  Carolus Linnaeus  Swedish botanist and anatomist  Taxonomy: ordered division of organisms into categories based on a set of characteristics used to assess similarities and differences.  Not based on evolutionary relationships but resemblance Binomial nomenclature  Common names (monkey, fish) refer to more than 1 species.  A 2 part scientific name (binomial) was created by Linnaeus 1. Genus: to which the species belongs 2. Specific epithet: unique for each species within the genus Ex: Leopard = Panthera pardus Hierarchical Classification  Species are placed into groups belonging to more comprehensive groups. Classification+evolutionary history  = Phylogeny  Phylogenic trees: branching diagram that represents a • hypothesis about evolutionary relationships.  Constructed from a series of dichotomies, 2 way branch points; divergence of 2 species from a common ancestor.  • It is a hypothesis. Phylogeny + Shared Characteristics  Cladogram: diagram depicting patterns of shared characteristics among species.  Clade: within a tree, a group of species that includes an ancestral species and all its descendants  Cladistics: analysis of how species are grouped Cladogram Cladistics: 1. Monophyletic: single tribe - Ancestral species and ALL descendants 2. Paraphyletic: result of lack of information on clade members - Ancestral species and SOME descendants 3. Polyphyletic: several species that lack a common ancestor Homologous VS Analogous  Structures in different species that are similar because of a common ancestry.  Similarity between 2 species due to convergent evolution rather than to descent from a common ancestor with the same trait. Phylograms  Length of a branch reflects the number of changes in a specific DNA sequence in that lineage.  Different lengths but all lineages have survived for the same number of years.  Indicates that a given gene evolves at slightly different rates in the different lineages. Ultrametric Trees  Same branching as a phylogram but all branches are of equal length.  Branches reflect measurements of geological time. History of Taxonomic Systems  2 Kingdom: plant (fungi, bacteria) and animal (protozoans)  5 Kingdoms: Monera, Protista, Plantae, Fungi, Animalia (Eukaryotes/Prokaryotes) Finally:  3 Domain System: Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya (Plants, Animals, Fungi) - level higher than Kingdom 3 Domain System