Classification and Taxonomy
Download
Report
Transcript Classification and Taxonomy
CLASSIFICATION AND TAXONOMY
World is so diverse
Classification
The grouping of information or objects based
on similarities
We classify things all the time (creates order)
Stores
Lane
Text Book
Systematics (taxonomy)
The science of grouping and naming
organisms
We need to be able to identify/name each species
Common names: confusing
Scientific names: specific to one species ONLY
that everyone uses
What is this called?
Common Names
Cougar
Puma
Panther
Mountain Lion
…………all are common names for same
animal.
Scientific name: Felis concolor
What is this called?
Common Names
Pill bug
Sow bug
Roly polies
Wood lice
Potato bug
………..all are common names for same bug
Scientific name: Armadillidium vulgare
Why Latin?
Scientific names are given in LATIN (because
it’s a dead language)
WHY USE A DEAD LANGUAGE?
Dichotomous keys
Used to identify organisms
Series of paired statements that describe
possible characteristics
Leads you to smaller subset
Aristotle
384-322 B.C. Greek philosopher
Divided animals into movement:
land, air, water
PROBLEMS???
Linnaean Classification
Biological Taxonomy:
Hierarchical system
proposed in the eighteenth
century by Carl Linnaeus.
Categories based on the
morphological characters
shared with others.
Linnaean System
Hierarchical classification using seven
categories or taxa, listed in order from
largest to smallest groupings: (Domain
was later added before kingdom)
Kingdom King
Phylum
Philip
Class
Came
Species - a group of
individuals that
Order
Over
actually or potentially
Family
For
interbreed in nature
Genus
Green
Species
Soup
Binomial Nomenclature aka:Linnaean 2 word naming system
Genus (first word)
Noun, Capitalized
Species (second word)
Descriptive, Lower Case
Underlined or Italicized
Humans - Homo sapiens
Red Oak - Quercus rubra
Practice
Common Name: Polar bear
Scientific Name: Ursus Arctos
Is this scientific name written
correctly?
Which is the genus?
Answer
Ursus arctos
Ursus arctos
U. arctos
Ursus is the genus
arctos is the species
Practice
What is the two word naming system
called?
Who developed it?
Answer
BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE
LINNAEUS
Practice
Which taxa contains more organisms? Family
or genus?
Answer
FAMILY has more organisms than GENUS
Kingdom (most general)
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species (most specific)
Scientific Classification
Kingdom Animalia
Eubacteria
Plantae
Phylum
Class
Chordata
Mammalia
Pinophyta
Pinopsida
Order
Primates
Proteobacteria
Gamma
Proteobacteria
Enterobacteriales
Family
Hominidae
Cupressaceae
Genus
Homo
Enterobacteriacea
e
Escherichia
Species
H. sapiens
E. coli
Pinales
Sequoiadendro
n
S. giganteum
Phylogenetic Systematics
Phylogeny takes into consideration the
evolutionary history of organisms, Not
just based on similarities/differences of physical
characteristics
Tree of Life
CLADOGRAMS are diagrams that look at
evolutionary relationships among organisms
Derived characteristics are traits that arose in
the most recent common ancestor of a particular
lineage and was passed along to its descendants
A clade is a group of organisms that includes an
ancestor and all descendents of that ancestor.
NODE: point where two groups
branch off from eachother/ last
shared a common ancestor
Derived character is
a trait shared by
later organisms but
not earlier ones
The more derived characters two organisms share, the more
recently they shared a common ancestor and the more closely they
are related in evolutionary terms.
Cladogram Chart Example
Modern Classification
Genes in DNA can be used as derived
characteristics
The more genes two species share,
the more closely related they are
Help make evolutionary trees more
accurate instead of depending on
appearance only
For Example…
Which two of the three birds seem more
closely related?
AFRICAN VULTURE
STORK
AMERICAN VULTURE
American vultures and storks share a
common behavior
When overheating, they urinate on legs to
cool down
African vulture doesn’t do this
Not enough to prove, so DNA analysis was
done……..
Surprise!
DNA from American vultures is more similar
to DNA in storks
Suggests they share a more common recent
ancestor
Domains and Kingdoms
Archaea
6 Kingdom System
Archaebacteria
Eubacteria
Eubacteria
3 Domain System
Protista
Eukarya
Fungi
Plantae
Animalia
Kingdoms and Domains
The three-domain system
Bacteria
Archaea
Eukarya
The six-kingdom system
Bacteria
Archaea
Protista
Plantae
Fungi
Animalia
Plantae
Fungi
Animalia
The traditional five-kingdom system
MONERA
Protista
Prokaryote Basic Structure
Prokaryotes
Prokaryotes:
(pro- means before, and -karyote means nucleus)
First type of cells to evolve
Very small
Unicellular
Two Types: Archaebacteria and Eubacteria
Common Prokaryote Shapes
Domain Archaea
• Kingdom: Archaebacteria
• Prokaryotic and unicellular
• Autotrophic/heterotrophic
• Have cell wall w/o peptidoglycan
• Anaerobic
• Extremophiles
-Thermophilic bacteria (live in extreme temps)
-Halophilic bacteria (live in high concentrations
of salt)
Snottites
Thermophiles
Domain Bacteria
Kingdom Eubacteria (eu=true)
Can be autotrophic or heterotrophic
Aerobic/anaerobic
Have a peptidoglycan cell wall
No organelles
Common
EUBACTERIA
Salmonella
E. coli
Streptococcus pyogenes
Why do we need prokaryotes?
Decomposers (create nutrients as waste)
Mutualistic relationship
Commercial uses
Eukaryotes
Eukaryotes differ from Prokaryotes in that
they are more complex and evolved later.
Kingdom Protista
Protists are highly debated in their classification.
Characteristics:
Simple unicellular or multicellular organisms
Aerobic/anaerobic
Some w/ cellulose cell walls/photosynthetic
Autotrophic/heterotrophic
PROTISTA
AMOEBA
DIATOMS
PARAMECIUM
EUGLENA
VOLVOX
Why do we need protists?
Produce a large bulk of world’s oxygen
Important part of food chain
Decomposers
Medicinal/industrial uses
Kingdom Fungi
Multicellular, except yeasts
Heterotrophic
Cell walls w/ chitin
Found in soil, on dead matter, and as symbionts
Become noticeable when fruiting, either as mushrooms
or molds.
FUNGI
MOLD
RUSTS
MUSHROOMS
YEASTS
Why do we need fungi?
decomposes organic matter and
important for nutrient cycling/exchange
Kingdom Plantae
Have organelles; including chloroplasts
Are all multicellular
Are all autotrophic, mostly
Asexual and sexual reproduction
Have a cellulose cell wall
NON-VASCULAR
FERNS
MOSSES
VASCULAR
Flowering plants
Conifers
Kingdom Animalia
Naked cells (no cell wall)
Heterotrophic
Multicellular
Two major types
-Vertebrates
-Invertebrates (**Most animals fit here)
VERTEBRATES- Has a vertebral column
Mammals
Reptiles
Bony Fish
Birds
Amphibians
INVERTEBRATES- lacks vertebral column
Sponges
Jellyfish
Earthworms
Ants
Starfish
Octopus
Butterfly
Shrimp
Some are motile
Some are
sessile
SYMMETRY