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•Classification •Taxonomy •Aristotle •Linnaeus •Kingdom •Phylum •Class •Order •Family •Genus •Species •Common name •Scientific name •Binomial nomenclature •Phylogeny •Systematics Hypothesis •Cladistics •Derived character •Cladogram •Dichotomous Key Diversity of Life • There are over 2.5 million identified species • Some biologists believe there may be 20 million more that have not been discovered • How can you possibly keep track of all of these? Why do we need to classify? • Imagine a store…..how do you know where to find the milk or the cereal? Are they in the same aisle? How is the store “organized”? Are all stores similar? • Imagine your computer or mp3 player…..are all of your songs and files in a single folder or do you have them grouped in some way? When you have a lot of information, it is best to organize and group items so that you can find them easier or easily see their relationship to other items ….this is why we CLASSIFY Even websites must organize their products Scientists also need a way to *NAME* organisms • The “common names” used by people can sometimes be misleading or confusing • In order to communicate effectively, biologists need a CONSISTENT naming protocol. *Check out these slides of confusing names….. Photo Credits Sea Lion: Bill Lim Ant Lion: Amphioxus Lion: law_keven Sea Lion? Antlion? Lion? Which one of these is NOT actually a bear? Photo Credits Panda: Chi King Koala: Belgianchocolate Black Bear: SparkyLeigh Consider this……….. • Are all “Grey Wolves” gray? • Are all “Black Bears” black? • Which is more venomous – a water moccasin or a cottonmouth? Grey wolves can be white, black and any shade of gray. Black bears can also be brown or gray A cottonmouth and a water moccasin are the same animal – the names vary by region. Devil Cat Ghost Cat Mountain Lion Screaming Cat Puma Florida Panther Cougar •There are at least 50 common names for the animal shown on the previous 7 slides. •Common names vary according to region. •Soooo……this is why we use a scientific name? Linnaeus to the Rescue! • Linnaeus, a Swedish botanist, developed a system for naming organisms • Binomial Nomenclature is a system that gives each organism a two part scientific name • For Example: Red Maple = Acer rubrum Example: Felis concolor or F. concolor Which is the genus? The species? Classifying Organisms • Once Linnaeus had come up with a system for naming organisms he started to group them • Organisms were put into groups based on similar characteristics • These groups are called Taxa and the science of naming and grouping is called Taxonomy 7 Layer Classification System • Taxonomy uses a system of 7 levels of taxa • The organisms in each Taxon become more closely related as you move down the ladder • The Taxons in order of most general to most specific are: Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus Species Categories within Kingdoms Kingdoms are divided into groups called phyla Phyla are subdivided into classes Classes are subdivided into orders Orders are subdivided into families Families are divided into genera Genera contain closely related species Species is unique Grizzly bear Black bear Giant panda Red fox KINGDOM Animalia PHYLUM Chordata CLASS Mammalia ORDER Carnivora FAMILY Ursidae GENUS Ursus SPECIES Ursus arctos Abert squirrel Coral snake Sea star Understand how to identify which species are more closely related. Humans Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Animalia Chordata Mammalia Primate Hominidae Homo sapiens The scientific name is always the genus + species Humans = Homo sapiens Photo by atomicshark Check for Understanding on your paper Check for Understanding A diagram that shows an evolutionary relationship is a ________________________ A characteristic that appears only in recent members is called a ________________ character The study of evolutionary relationships is called __________________________ A system to find the name of an unknown organism is a _______________________ key Three Domain System Recently, scientists have added a group above Kingdom. Three groups, called DOMAINS, contain each of the six kingdoms. Domain Eukarya - includes organisms composed of eukaryotic cells (plants, animals, fungi, protists) Domain Bacteria - includes all prokaryotic cells, Kingdom Eubacteria Domain Archaea - includes only "ancient" bacteria, Archaebacteria – lives in extreme conditions 3 Domain System The Kingdoms • There are currently 6 kingdoms – all organisms can be placed into one of those 6. • Classification into a kingdom is based on certain criteria o o o o Number of cells – unicellular / multicellular How it obtains energy – autotroph / heterotroph Type of cell – prokaryote / eukaryote Cell Wall makeup – no / yes (chitin, cellulose, peptidoglycan) Terms to remember Autotrophs capture the light energy from sunlight and convert it to chemical energy they use for food. Heterotrophs must get energy by eating autotrophs or other heterotrophs. Decomposers, aka saprobes, are heterotrophs that recycle dead organisms by breaking them down. Kingdom Animalia Photo by Tambako the Jaguar • Multicellular • Heterotrophic (must consume food) • Eukaryotic (cells have a nucleus) • Examples: birds, insects, worms, mammals, reptiles, humans Photo by Eduardo Amorim Kingdom Plantae •Multicellular •Autotrophic (can make own food; photosynthesis) •Eukaryotic (cells have nucleus) •Cellulose Cell Wall Photo by hira3 Kingdom Fungae • • • • Multicellular (most) Heterotrophic (mainly decomposers) Eukaryotic Chitin Cell Wall Photos by nutmeg66 Kingdom Protista • Most are unicellular • Can be hetertrophic or autotrophic • Most live in the water • Eukaryotes (all have nucleus) • Examples: Ameba, paramecium, euglena, algae • Most live in water Photo of Ameba by PROYECTO AGUA **/** WATER PROJECT Kingdom EuBacteria & ArcheaBacteria • Unicellular • Can be autotrophic or heterotrophic • Prokaryotes (do not have a nucleus) Eubacteria = common bacteria (E. coli, Salmonella) Archaebacteria = “ancient bacteria”, exist in extreme environments Kingdoms and Domains Classification of Living Things DOMAIN Bacteria Archaea KINGDOM Eubacteria Archaebacteria CELL TYPE CELL STRUCTURES Protista Fungi Plantae Animalia Prokaryote Prokaryote Eukaryote Eukaryote Eukaryote Eukaryote Cell walls with peptidoglycan Cell walls without peptidoglycan Cell walls of cellulose in some; some have chloroplasts Cell walls of chitin Cell walls of cellulose; chloroplasts No cell walls or chloroplasts Unicellular Most unicellular; some colonial; Most some multicellular multicellular; some Autotroph or unicellular heterotroph Heterotroph Amoeba, Paramecium, slime molds, giant Mushrooms, yeasts kelp Multicellular Multicellular Autotroph Heterotroph Mosses, ferns, flowering plants Sponges, worms, insects, fishes, mammals NUMBER OF CELLS Unicellular MODE OF NUTRITION Autotroph or heterotroph EXAMPLES Eukarya Streptococcus, Escherichia coli Autotroph or heterotroph Methanogens, halophiles Eukaryotic Cell Prokaryotic Cell The Dichotomous Key • A key is a device for easily and quickly identifying an unknown organism. • The dichotomous key is the most widely used type in biological sciences. • The user is presented with a sequence of choices between two statements, couplets, based on characteristics of the organism. By always making the correct choice, the name of the organism will be revealed. 1. Has green colored body ......go to 2 Has purple colored body ..... go to 4 2. Has 4 legs .....go to 3 Has 8 legs .......... Deerus octagis 3. Has a tail ........ Deerus pestis Does not have a tail ..... Deerus magnus 4. Has a pointy hump ...... Deerus humpis Does not have a pointy hump.....go to 5 5. Has ears .........Deerus purplinis Does not have ears ......Deerus deafus Practice Questions Practice Questions Knowledge of which of these is most important in classifying this new organism into a kingdom? F The color of light absorbed by the organism G The type of radiation emitted H The use of photosynthesis J The color of the organism Characteristics of a Newly Discovered Organism • Absorbs blue light • Emits infrared radiation • Contains RNA in nucleus • Appears as a red organism in full daylight • Can obtain nutrition through photosynthesis Practice Questions Knowledge of which of these is most important in classifying this new organism into a kingdom? F The color of light absorbed by the organism G The type of radiation emitted H The use of photosynthesis J The color of the organism Characteristics of a Newly Discovered Organism • Absorbs blue light • Emits infrared radiation • Contains RNA in nucleus • Appears as a red organism in full daylight • Can obtain nutrition through photosynthesis Key phrase Practice Questions Knowledge of which of these is most important in classifying this new organism into a kingdom? F The color of light absorbed by the organism G The type of radiation emitted H The use of photosynthesis J The color of the organism Strategy: Think about ways biologist classify info: How they get energy, cell structure, etc. Characteristics of a Newly Discovered Organism • Absorbs blue light • Emits infrared radiation • Contains RNA in nucleus • Appears as a red organism in full daylight • Can obtain nutrition through photosynthesis Key phrase Practice Questions Knowledge of which of these is most important in classifying this new organism into a kingdom? F The color of light absorbed by the organism G The type of radiation emitted H The use of photosynthesis J The color of the organism Characteristics of a Newly Discovered Organism • Absorbs blue light • Emits infrared radiation • Contains RNA in nucleus • Appears as a red organism in full daylight • Can obtain nutrition through photosynthesis Taxonomy uses characteristics of the organism, such as how the organism obtains energy, in classifying.