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Biology II: Fundamentals of evolution, systematics and diversity of life ESNRM 11209 Sandun J Perera, PhD Department of Natural Resources Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka Topic 3 Biosystematics July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 2 Biosystematics Biosystematics → Bio(logical) Systematics Biosystematics: the systematic study of the diversity of life on the planet earth, both past and present, and the relationships among living things through time. July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 3 Biosystematics Systematics is fundamental to biology; because it is the foundation for all studies of organisms, that shows how any organism relates to other living organisms Systematics is also of major importance in understanding conservation; because it attempts to explain the earth's biodiversity, and used in prioritising taxa for conservation e.g. Red Listing July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 4 Biosystematics The topic will be discussed under three main sub-topics; 1. Taxonomy (= Biosystematics) The holistic practice of describing, identifying, classifying, and naming of organisms systematically. And then we discuss the two key processes in taxonomy (among the above list of processes) in two separate sub topics; 2. Classification Placing organisms within groups, that show their relationships to other organisms 3. Nomenclature The system of naming organisms systematically July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 5 Biosystematics Hence; The term “biosystematics" is sometimes used synonymously with "taxonomy” which is correct But, the term “biosystematics" is sometimes confused with "scientific/biological classification” July 2016 which is wrong SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 6 Taxonomy July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 7 Taxonomy Meaning of the term “taxonomy” - science and the practice of classification In Greek; τάξις → taxis = “order” + νόμος → nomos = “law” or “science” But it includes the holistic practice of describing, identifying, classifying, and naming of organisms systematically Taxonomy is the primary tool in understanding organisms, as nothing about an organism's relationships with other living things can be understood without it first being properly studied and described in sufficient detail to identify and classify it correctly July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 8 Taxonomy In taxonomy organisms are grouped according to phylogenetic relationships following a hierarchic pattern of ancestor descendant sequence. Taxonomic units / levels July 2016 known as taxa (singular taxon) are hierarchical in structure Domain Kingdom Phylum (for animals) or Division (for plants) Class; Order; Family; Genus; Species. SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 9 Taxonomy Basis of taxonomy is common ancestry. The common ancestry is determined by features organisms have in common. Two species that have a common ancestor (shown by a feature shared in both species), which they do not share with a third species, are considered to be more closely related to each other than to the third; so grouped into a single genus. e.g. The American black bear and the Polar bear, against the Panda July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 10 Two main approaches in taxonomy/systematics Phenetic systematics Phenetic systematics involves classification by using the morphology and physiology of the organisms. Phylogenetic (Cladistic) systematics Phylogenetic systematics uses evolutionarily novel characteristics, to calssify organisms and their relationships through time. Today, phyologenetic systematists generally make extensive use of molecular genetics and computer programs to study organisms. July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 11 Taxonomic groupings A fundamental taxonomic grouping; two fundamental groups of organisms were recognized in 1937 Prokaryotes Life form in which DNA is not organised within a cell nucleus. Eukaryotes Organisms possessing an organised nucleus enclosed by a double nuclear membrane. This grouping was first proposed by Chatton (1937) as two Empires: Prokaryota and Eukaryota They are known today as Domains: Prokarya and Eukarya July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 12 Édouard Chatton (1883 – 1947) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 13 July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 14 Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic Cells July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 15 Classification July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 16 Classification Organisms are not evolved on earth for humans to classify and put in to groups The evolution is an ongoing process which never ends The classification systems are artificial and keeps changing more and more refined methods are employed in identification and characterization of species established relationships between species change, as a result of changes in calssification e. g. numbers of established species in known taxa have increased considerably with the use of DNA for species characterissation 8,600 bird species in 1956 have increased to 9,956 (~10,000) by 2016 Let’s forget about the species and have a look at the history of classification in Domain & Kingdoms of organisms July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 17 Two kingdom classification Two kingdoms of living things: Animalia for animals and Vegetabilia for plants (Carolus Linnaeus, 1735: Systema Natuare) Linnaeus also treated minerals, as a third kingdom, Mineralia When single-celled organisms were first discovered, they were split between the two kingdoms: Mobile forms in the Animal kingdom (phylum Protozoa) Algae and Bacteria in Plant Kingdom (divisions Thallophyta or Protophyta). However, several forms were hard to place, or were placed in different kingdoms by different authors July 2016 Ernst Haeckel suggested creating a third kingdom Protista for them SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 18 Carolus (Carl) Linnaeus (1707 – 1778) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 19 Three & Four kingdom classifications Three-kingdom system: Plantae, Protista, Animalia (Haeckel, 1866: Generelle Morphologie der Organismen) In the meantime Chatton identified two empires Going along the same lines, Herbert Copeland gave the prokaryotes a separate kingdom, originally called Mychota but later referred to as Monera. Four-kingdom system: Monera, Protista, Plantae, Animalia (Copeland, 1956) Here, he placed All prokaryotes in to Kingdom Monera And, all eukaryotes other than animals and plants in the kingdom Protista July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 20 Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1834 – 1919) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 21 Herbert Faulkner Copeland (1902 – 1968) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 22 Five kingdom classification Robert Whittaker recognized an additional kingdom for the Fungi. Five-kingdom system: Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia (Whittaker, 1969) It is based mainly on differences in nutrition: Plantae - mostly multicellular autotrops. Animalia – multicellular heterotrops. Fungi – multicellular saprotrops. Protista and Monera - unicellular organisms and simple cellular colonies July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 23 Robert Harding Whittaker (1920–1980) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 24 Six kingdom classification In early 1980 the emphasis on phylogeny caused redefining of the kingdoms. Based on r-RNA studies Carl Woese divided the prokaryotes into two kingdoms, called Eubacteria and Archaebacteria. Six-kingdom system: Archaebacteria, Eubacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia (Woese, 1977) This have become the standard in many works. July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 25 Carl Richard Woese (1928 – 2012) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 26 Six kingdom classification Most Taxonomist use the six -kingdom system today It groups organisms that have similar characteristics in major cellular structure methods of obtaining nutrients Metabolism Viruses are not included in any kingdom - due to their non-living characteristics (they are not cells) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 27 Summary: History of classification systems Linnaeus 1735 2 kingdoms Haeckel Chatton 1866 1937 3 kingdoms 2 empires (not treated) Protista Vegetabilia Plantae Animalia Animalia July 2016 Copeland Whittaker Woese et al. 1956 1969 1977 4 kingdoms 5 kingdoms 6 kingdoms Eubacteria Prokaryota Monera Monera Archaebacteria Protista Protista Protista Fungi Fungi Eukaryota Plantae Plantae Plantae Animalia Animalia Animalia SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life Woese et al. 1990 3 domains Bacteria Archaea Eukarya 28 Carl Richard Woese (1928 – 2012) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 29 Three-domain system (Woese et al., 1990) Through the development of molecular biology, It was found that there has been a common ancestor of all organisms. This was found by comparing 16 S ribosomal RNA sequences, which do not recombined during reproduction The PHYLOGENTIC TREE (FAMILY TREE) drawn from this data show that living things SEEM to fall naturally into Three Broad Groups, or DOMAINS July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 30 Three-domain system (Woese et al., 1990) EUBACTERIA ARCHAEBACTERIA PROTISTA PLANTAE FUNGI ANIMALIA SIX KINGDOMS Relationships between today’s organisms Where modern kingdoms diverged from a common ancestor BACTERIA ARCHAEA COMMON ANCESTOR July 2016 EUKARYA THREE DOMAINS From common ancestor of all organisms. The most ancient lineages are at the bottom and the most recent are at the top on a vertical time scale SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 31 Three-domain system (Woese et al., 1990) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 32 Three-domain system (Woese et al., 1990) DOMAIN ARCHAEA Kingdom Archaebacteria (ancient bacteria) the chemosynthetic OR heterotrophic bacteria DOMAIN BACTERIA Kingdom Eubacteria (true bacteria) the disease-causing (heterotrophic) bacteria. DOMAIN EUKARYA All complex organisms - Protists, Fungi, Plants and Animals Archea and Eukariya are more closer and evolved from a common ancestor, where Domain Archea is the most primitive and Domain Eucariya is the least primitive July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 33 DOMAIN ARCHIA (KINGDOM ARCHAEBACTERIA) Typical PROKARYOTIC cell structure July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 34 DOMAIN ARCHIA (KINGDOM ARCHAEBACTERIA) UNICELLULAR, PROKARYOTES Some are AUTOTROPHIC, producing food by CHEMOSYNTHESIS Most are HETEROTROPHIC They may have directly descended from, and looks very similar to the “first organisms on earth” Archae = "ANCIENT“ in Greek. Distinctive features; A single thick, homogeneous cell wall Biochemical and Genetic Properties that Differ from all other kinds of Life. July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 35 DOMAIN ARCHIA (KINGDOM ARCHAEBACTERIA) Archaebacteria live in anaerobic and harsh environments Intestines of mammals. Sulfurous hot springs. Very salty lakes. They multiply by Budding prokaryotic binary fission (single cell divides into 2) fragmentation (single cell divides into more) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 36 DOMAIN BACTERIA (KINGDOM EUBACTERIA) More evolved PROKARYOTIC cell structure July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 37 DOMAIN BACTERIA (KINGDOM EUBACTERIA) UNICELLULAR, PROKARYOTES. Both AUTOTROPHS and HETEROTROPHS Includes all the disease-causing bacteria such as tooth decay or food poisoning Have a more evolved cellular structure A cell wall, plasma membrane, nucleoid region, ribosome, flagella and pilli, capsule and slime layer, and an endospore to survive high temperatures and extreme conditions Reproduce by prokaryotic binary fission (single cell divides into 2) They do have ways to recombine genes, allowing evolution to occur. July 2016 Bacterial Conjugation – DNA transfer between 2 bacterial cells, through a conjugation tube SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 38 DOMAIN BACTERIA (KINGDOM EUBACTERIA) Bacterial Conjugation July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 39 DOMAIN EUKARIA Organised EUKARYOTIC cell structure July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 40 DOMAIN EUKARIA Distinctive features of Eukaryotes; Organised and membrane bound (true) nuclei with linear chromosomes Membranous organelles Cytosceleton Four kingdoms; Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia. The kingdoms Fungi, Plantae and Animalia shares a common ancestor July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 41 KINGDOM PROTISTA (≡ PROTOCTISTA) EUKARYOTES UNICELLULAR and MULTICELLULAR Both AUTOTROPHS and HETEROTROPHS Grouping of diverse eukaryotic organisms that are not animals, plants or fungi. They do not form a natural group (or clade), but are often grouped together for convenience. In cladistic systems, these refers to a paraphyletic group which spans the entire eukaryotic tree of life. They include; Protozoa - the unicellular "animal-like (heterotrophic/parasitic) Protists Protophyta - the "plant-like" (autotrophic) Protists (mostly unicellular algae) Molds - the "fungus-like" (saprophytic) Protists (slime molds and water molds). July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 42 KINGDOM FUNGI EUKARYOTES Most are MULTICELLULAR SAPROTROPHIC (ABSORPTIVE HETEROTROPHIC) Obtain their nutrients by releasing digestive enzymes into the food source. Then absorb the digested food. naturally act either as DECOMPOSERS or PARASITES Cell walls contain a material called Chitin (A polysaccharide) Posses a unique cellular structure Kingdom Fungi includes Molds, Mildews, Mushrooms and Yeast July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 43 KINGDOM PLANTAE EUKARYOTES MULTICELLULAR AUTOTROPHS - Carry out Photosynthesis. Cell walls, contain Cellulose (A polysaccharide). Plant cells are specialized for different functions, such as photosynthesis, transport, support, etc. Kingdom Plantae includes Mosses, Ferns, Cone-bearing plants (GYMNOSPERMS), and Flowering plants (ANGIOSPERMS) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 44 KINGDOM ANIMALIA EUKARYOTES MULTICELLULAR HETEROTROPHIC Do not have cell walls. Most members can move from place to place, but some are permanently attached to a surfaces (e.g. Sponges and Barnacles) Kingdom Animalia includes Sponges, Jellyfish, Worms, Insects, Sea stars, Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Birds and Mammals, including human July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 45 Summary: Six Kingdoms of life July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 46 Nomenclature July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 47 Nomenclature Once a new species is recognised, it is named according to a universal system of scientific nomenclature: Process of Description All identified species in the world, including the extinct fossil species, have a scientific name Name consists of a generic name followed by a specific epithet. generic name starts with a capital letter species name (epithet) starts with a simple letter Binomial system of nomenclature – Carolus Linnaeus, 1758 It is Latinized and printed in italics or underlined Latin was considered the language of educated during medieval period Before Linnaeus, scientific names had several words: polynomials July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 48 Nomenclature Today the taxonomic nomenclature is been controlled by voluntary application of internationally agreed codes to preserve its uniformity July 2016 International codes of nomenclature for animals, plants & bacteria SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 49 ICZN – International Code of Zoological Nomenclature For name of a faunal species to be considered valid the species name (epithet) has to be introduced with the generic name in Latinised form. For this, a statement is needed proposing a latinised binomial name for newly recognized species, along with a description of how it differs from other related species. This description has to be published in printed form accompanied by a specimen designated as the type specimen. July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 50 ICZN – International Code of Zoological Nomenclature In case if a species has been given two names by two different people, it will be corrected by giving priority to the oldest name, once it is detected. Junior synonym becomes invalid Name of the original author, and the year of publication of the original name is mentioned when a species name is written formally; Elephas maximus Linnaeus, 1758 Gona sinhalaya Deraniyagala, 1938 July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 51 ICZN – International Code of Zoological Nomenclature When there is a taxonomic revision for the genus name, the original author & the year of publication is given in brackets following the scientific name e.g. “Newgenus” maximus (Linnaeus, 1758) Trinomens are given when there are different sub species the sub population first described is designated by tautonymy (it is called the nominate subspecies) e.g. Trachypithecus vetulus vetulus Erxlenben, 1977 (Southern lowland wetzone purple-faced langur) other sub species get different third names. e.g. Trachypithecus vetulus monticola Erxlenben, 1977. (Montane purple-faced langur / Bear Monkey) July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 52 ICBN – International Code of Botanical Nomenclature The code governs the scientific names of both green plants and fungi It is similar to ICZN except for few features Double citation is practiced when there is a taxonomic revision for a taxa Scentless mayweed – named by Linnaeus in 1755 as Matricaria inodora revised and placed in a different genus by Schultz (Sch-Bip) its present name is Tripleurospermum inodora (L.) Sch-Bip, 1755 note the standard acronyms for author names: botanical author abbreviations Tautonyms are not permitted in botanical names July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 53 In addition to ICZN & ICBN, international codes are there for naming bacteria and viruses too. July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 54 Type specimens Type specimen = the specimen to which the original name is attached to, and referred to in its original description Holotype is the specimen which demonstrate the characters on which the new name is based When the author select one specimen as the holotype from a group of type specimens, others are known as Paratypes The entire group of specimens, the author refer when describing a species are Syntypes When there is a dispute on the name designated to a species, the name that best fits the type specimen will be accepted Therefore, it is very important to well preserve the type specimens, with a clear label, and placed permanently in an internationally reputed place such as a natural history museum July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 55 The British Museum of Natural History, London Any many more such museums worldwide July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 56 Type specimens July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 57 QUIZ July 2016 SJP | Evolution, systematics & diversity of life 58