Classification of Organisms
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Transcript Classification of Organisms
Classification of Organisms
It’s always changing!!!!
Taxonomy
The science of
describing, naming, and
classifying organisms
How Did We Get Our Modern
System of Classification?
Binomial Nomenclature
A system for giving each organism a
two-word scientific name that consists
of the genus name followed by the
species name
Carl Linnaeus, a Swedish biologist in
the 1700s
Approach has been universally
adopted
The organism’s “scientific name”
Genus & Species
A level of classification that comes after family and
that contains similar species
The first word in the scientific name
– Capitalized
The second word (the species name)
– Lowercased
Homo sapiens
Family
Similar genera
Hominidae (Great Apes)
Order
A grouping of similar families
Primates
Class
A grouping of orders
with common properties
Mammalia
Phylum
Classes with similar
characteristics
Chordata (subphylum:
Vertebrata)
Kingdom
Similar phyla grouped together
Animalia
Domain
Largest and most inclusive taxonomic category
Similar kingdoms grouped together
3 domains
– Archaea (prokaryotes)
– Bacteria (prokaryotes)
– Eukarya (4 kingdoms of eukaryotes)
Domain
Domain
Domain
Archaea (prokaryotes)
– Kingdom Archaebacteria
– Live in extreme environments: volcanic hot springs, brine
pools, black organic mud
– Cell wall lacks peptidoglycan (murein): made of sugars and
amino acids
Bacteria (prokaryotes)
– Kingdom Eubacteria
– Free-living soil organisms to deadly parasites
– Cell wall contains peptidoglycan
Domain
Eukarya
– Kingdom Protista
– Kingdom Fungi
– Kingdom Plantae
– Kingdom Animalia
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Domain
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
Biological Species
A group of organisms that can reproduce only
among themselves and that are usually
contained in a geographic region
Convergent Evolution
The process by which
unrelated species become
more similar as they
adapt to the same kind of
environment
Analogous Characters
Similarities that arise through convergent
evolution
Phylogeny
The evolutionary
history of a species or
taxonomic group
Discovered through
molecular sequencing
data and
morphological data
matrices
Cladistics
A phylogenetic classification system that uses
shared derived characters and ancestry as the
sole criterion for grouping taxa
Example: birds and mammals:
– a backbone is an ancestral character
– feathers are a derived character
Cladogram
A diagram that is based on patterns of shared, derived
traits and that shows the evolutionary relationships
between groups of organisms