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Classification

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Title: Classification


1
Classification
  • Chapter 17-Pg. 502-523

2
Finding Order in Diversity
  • Why Classify Organisms??
  • Biologists use classification systems to name
    organisms and group them in a logical order
  • Taxonomy Scientists classify organisms and
    assign each organism a universally accepted name

3
The History of Organization

Aristotle 384-322 BC Interested in biological
classification. Patterns in nature.
Carl Linnaeus 1707-1778 ACE Father ofBiological
Classification!
4
Aristotle
  • Developed the first system of classification.
  • He classified all living things into plants and
    animals.
  • Animals were grouped depending on where they
    lived. (On land, in air or in water)
  • Later scientist became convinced that his system
    did not work because of organisms living in
    multiple habitats.

5
Carolus Linnaeus
  • Developed the system of classification that is
    still used today.
  • He selected physical characteristics that led to
    classification based on close relationships of
    organisms.
  • He used characteristics such as bats having hair
    and feeding their young milk to classify the
    organisms.
  • The system devised by Linnaeus gives each
    organism two names called Binomial Nomenclature.

6
WHY DO WE CLASSIFY ORGANISMS?
  • We classify organisms in order to study the
    diversity of life.
  • Biologist use a classification system to name the
    organism and group them into a logical manner.

7
In order to make their job easier, scientists
classify living things into groups, based on how
they are the same, and how they are different.
8
What is Classification?
Classification arranges objects, ideas, or
information into groups by finding common
traits or characteristics.
9
Assigning Scientific Names
  • For many species, there are often regional
    differences in their common names
  • EX Buzzard in the UK refers to a hawk, Buzzard
    in the US refers to a vulture
  • To eliminate such confusion, scientists agreed to
    use a single name for each species

10
Assigning Scientific Names
  • Binomial Nomenclature Scientists assign each
    kind of organism a universally accepted name in
    the system
  • Two word system using the Genus and Species
  • Words are always written in italics
  • First word (Genus) is capitalized and second word
    (Species) is lowercase
  • Second word is a Latinized description of a
    particular trait
  • Developed by an 18th C. Swedish botanist named
    Carolus Linnaeus
  • EX Grizzly Bear Ursus arctos

11
Assigning Scientific Names
  • Differences in Binomial Nomenclature
  • 1st part of scientific name is genus to which the
    organism belongs
  • A genus is composed of a number of closely
    related species
  • 2nd part of scientific name is unique to the
    species within the genus
  • EX Ursus arctos Grizzly Bear, Ursus maritimus
    Polar Bear
  • EX Papio annubis and Papio cynocephalus do NOT
    belong to the same species since the species part
    of the name is different. However, they do
    belong to the same genus

12
Common name Robin
  • Erithacus rubicula
  • Turdus migratorus

13
Common name Black and Polar Bear
  • Ursus americanus
  • Ursus maritimus

14
There are six basic characteristics of life. All
living things have the following traits.
  • 1. Show an orderly structure, or organization,
    of tiny units called cells.
  • Reproduce to make more living things.
  • Change during their lives through growth and
    development.
  • Adjust to their surroundings.
  • Obtain and use energy to run the processes of
    life.
  • Pass on traits to their offspring.

15
2 types of Reproduction
  • ASEXUAL (binary fission) a single parent passes
    exact copies of its DNA to its offspring.
    Occurs in bacteria and single celled organisms
    such as the amoeba.
  • The single-celled amoeba demonstrates
  • a simple method of asexual reproduction
  • it divides in half by a process called fission,
  • producing two smaller daughter cells. After
  • a period of feeding and growth, these two
  • daughter cells will themselves divide in half.

16
2 types of Reproduction
  • 2. SEXUAL - organisms having genetic
    characteristics derived from two parents are
    produced.
  • Male and female reproductive cells (gametes)
    unite to form a single cell, known as a zygote,
    which later undergoes successive divisions to
    form a new organism.

17
Adjust HOMEOSTASIS
  • Organisms respond to their external environment
    and then process the internal demands
    accordingly.
  • The maintenance of stable internal conditions in
    spite of changes in the external environment.
  • Example temperature of a human is always
    around 98.6 regardless of the temperature
    outside.

18
Groups are also arranged in hierarchical order.
19
Assigning Scientific Names
  • Linnaeuss System of Classification
  • Based on Taxonomy naming system
  • Taxonomy is the branch of biology concerned with
    the grouping and naming of organisms.
  • a group at any level of an organization is
    referred to as a taxon.
  • Is hierarchical and consists of 7 taxonomic
    categories
  • From largest to smallest
  • Kingdom (King) Made up of phylums
  • Phylum (Phillip) Made up of several different
    classes
  • Class (Came) Made up of several different
    orders
  • Order (Over) Made up of several different
    families
  • Family (For) Made up of several different
    genuses
  • Genus (Grape) Made up of several different
    species
  • Species (Soda)

20
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21
SPECIES
  • A GROUP OF SIMILAR LOOKING ORGANISMS THAT SHARE
    SIMILAR CHARACTERISTICS AND CAN INTERBREED WITH
    ONE ANOTHER TO PRODUCE FERTILE OFFSPRING.
  • horse donkey mule (non-fertile offspring)
  • species species non-species

22
Assigning Scientific Names
  • Examples of Taxonomic Levels
  • The most general and largest of Linnaeuss system
    is the Kingdom
  • Linnaeus recognized the kingdoms of plants
    (Plantae) and animals (Animalia)
  • The class of Mammalia includes mammals which are
    organisms that have
  • Are warm-blooded
  • Have body hair
  • Produce milk for their young

23
Modern Evolutionary Classification
  • Traditional classifications like Linnaeuss
    tended to take into account primarily general
    similarities in appearance
  • However, some organisms that ARE NOT closely
    related look alike because of convergent
    evolution!
  • Evolutionary Classification The procedure of
    grouping organisms based on their evolutionary
    history
  • Species within one genus should be more closely
    related to each other than a species in another
    genus
  • All genera within a family share a common
    ancestor. Similar genes

24
Modern Evolutionary Classification
  • Derived Characters An evolutionary innovation
  • EX Free swimming larva, segmented body
  • Cladistic Analysis Analysis that focuses on the
    order in which derived characters appear in an
    organism
  • Looks only at derived characters, or those
    characteristics that are evolutionary innovations
    (EX body structures, adaptations)
  • New characteristics emerge as lineages evolve
    over time
  • Cladogram a table analyzing derived characters
    that shows the evolutionary relationship between
    organisms
  • Helps scientists understand how lineages branched
    from one another in the course of evolution
  • Shows the order in which derived characters
    evolved

25
Modern Evolutionary Classification
  • Similarities in RNA and DNA
  • Similar genes are evidence of common ancestry
  • Similarities in DNA can help determine
    classification and evolutionary relationships
  • EX A cow and a yeasts degree of relationship
    can be determined from their genes
  • EX Scientists have found that humans and yeast
    have similar genes for the assembly of certain
    proteins (Myosin)
  • All organisms use DNA and RNA to pass on
    information

26
Modern Evolutionary Classification
  • Similarities in RNA and DNA Cont
  • DNA evidence can help show the evolutionary
    relationship between organisms and how species
    have changed
  • EX Presence of similar genes in very dissimilar
    organisms implies that the organisms share a
    common ancestor like vultures and storks!

27
Kingdoms and Domains
  • In the 1800s scientists used a 3 kingdom
    classification system
  • Animals, Plants, Protista
  • Scientists grouped organisms according to how
    long they have been evolving independently
  • Biologists knowledge of diversity of life
    continued to grow
  • We now know there are 6 Kingdoms
  • Archaebacteria (used to be grouped as the Monera
    category)
  • Eubacteria (used to be grouped as the Monera
    category)
  • Protista (used to be grouped with Plants)
  • Fungi
  • Plantae
  • Animalia

28
Kingdoms and Domains
  • The Three Domain System
  • Modern analysis of evolutionary trees have given
    rise to a new taxonomic category Domain
  • A domain is more inclusive and larger than a
    kingdom
  • There are 3 Domains
  • Eukarya includes kingdoms protist, fungi,
    plants, animals
  • Archaea includes kingdom Archaebacteria
  • Bacteria Includes kingdom Eubacteria
  • The 3 domains are thought to have diverged from a
    common ancestor before the evolution of the main
    groups of eukaryotes
  • Recognizes fundamental differences between 2
    groups of prokaryotes- Bacteria Archaea

29
Kingdoms and Domains
  • Domain Archaea
  • Kingdom Archaebacteria ancient bacteria
  • Unicellular Prokaryotes (do not have a true
    nucleus)
  • Found in extreme environments salt lakes, swamps
    and VERY deep within the ocean. Deep sea
    bacteria, make their own food (autotroph) using
    energy derived from minerals coming form without
    oxygen. Also heterotrophs
  • Cell wall do not contain unusual lipids
    (peptidoglycan)
  • Subdivided into 3 groups based on their habitat
    --- methanogens, thermoacidophiles, extreme
    halophiles

30
Halophiles (like salt)
Thermophiles (like heat)
31
  • Kingdoms and Domains
  • Domain Bacteria
  • Kingdom Eubacteria- true bacteria
  • Prokaryotes
  • Unicellular
  • Heterotroph or autotroph
  • Can be aerobic (require oxygen) or anaerobic
    (dont need oxygen)
  • Cell walls are thick rigid contain lipid
    (peptidoglycan)
  • Found in practically every environment on Earth.
  • Can be identified by Gram staining (gram positive
    or gram negative)
  • Come in 3 basic shapes --- cocci (spheres),
    bacilli (rod shaped), spirilla (corkscrew shape)
  • Some need oxygen to survive others do not

32
Eubacteria
  • Staphylococcus aureus 
  • Bacillus anthracis
  • E. coli

33
Kingdoms and Domains
  • Domain Eukarya
  • Eukaryotes
  • Consists of the 4 kingdoms
  • Protista
  • organisms that cannot be classified as plants,
    animals, or fungi
  • Usually unicellular but some multicellular
  • Have chloroplasts (autotroph) or Heterotroph
  • Membrane-bound organelles
  • Cell wall of cellulose
  • Classified by the way they move- flagellum,
    cilia, or pseudopods
  • EX Algae, Ameobas, Parameciums and kelp

34
Amoeba
Rotifer
Euglena
Algae
35
Kingdoms and Domains
  • Kingdom Fungi
  • Eukaryotes
  • Heterotrophs that feed on dead or decaying matter
    (saprobes). Decomposers obtain energy by
    breaking down organic material that they absorb
    from the environment.
  • Do not contain chlorophyll
  • Store food energy as glycogen.
  • decomposers recyclers
  • Can be single or multicelled
  • Cell walls contain chitin (tough outer covering)
  • Non-motile (cannot move)
  • Lack true roots, stems, leaves
  • EX Mushrooms yeast

36
Mold
Mushrooms
Ringworm
Yeast
37
Kingdoms and Domains
  • Kingdom Plantae
  • -Eukaryotes
  • Photosynthetic autotrophs or producers
  • Non-motile
  • Multicellular
  • Contain chlorophyll inside of chloroplasts
  • Undergo photosynthesis
  • Cell walls contain cellulose
  • All plants that reproduce sexually
  • EX mosses, ferns, flowering plants, cone-bearing
    plants, etc


38
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39
Kingdoms and Domains
  • Animalia
  • Eukaryotes
  • Multicellular heterotrophic
  • Cells contain a nucleus and membrane bound
    organelles
  • Show levels of organization including cell,
    tissue, organ, system
  • Cells are specialized for particular functions
  • No cell walls or chloroplast
  • Motile- can move about
  • EX animals

40
Animalia
  • 99 of the organisms in Kingdom Animalia are
    invertebrates meaning they lack a backbone. Ex.
    Class Insecta
  • Organisms that have a backbone are called
    verterbrates. Ex. Aves (birds), Mammals,
    Amphibians (frogs)

41
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42
1. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
43
2. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
44
3. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
45
4. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
46
5. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
47
6. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
48
7. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
49
8. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
50
9. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
51
10. Which Kingdom do I belong to?
52
Sponges and Cnidarians
  • The only animals that
  • do not have tissues.
  • Mostly marine.
  • heterotrophs
  • Ex. Jellyfish, corals

53
Mollusks
  • Have something called a coulomb (sac-like
    structure) that encloses their internal organs.
  • heterotrophs
  • Most have a hard external skeleton (shell).
  • Ex. Snails, oysters, clams, octopuses

54
Mollusks
55
Worms
  • Cylinder shaped bodies.
  • heterotrophs
  • Live on both land and water.

56
Arthropods
  • Most diverse of all animals.
  • Have an external skeleton.
  • Have jointed appendages, such as antennae and
    jaws.
  • heterotrophs
  • High rate of reproduction.
  • 2/3 of all animals.

57
Arthropods
58
Echinoderms
  • Ability to regenerate a lost limb.
  • heterotrophs
  • Ex. Sea stars, sea urchins

59
Vertebrates
  • Internal skeleton made of bone.
  • Includes mammals, fish, birds, reptiles and
    amphibians.
  • heterotrophs

60
Warm-blooded
  • Endotherms- animal that generates its own body
    heat from within.
  • Ex. Humans or other mammals.

61
Cold-blooded
  • Ectotherms- relies on its environment to help
    control its body temperature.
  • Snakes, lizards, iguanas.

62
What are Dichotomous Keys?
  • a method for determining the identity of
    something (like the name of a butterfly, a plant,
    a lichen, or a rock) by going through a series of
    contrasting choices that leads the user to the
    correct name of the item.
  • Dichotomous means "divided in two parts".

63
Using a dichotomous key
  • At each step of the process of using the key, the
    user is given two choices each alternative leads
    to another question until the item is identified.
  • 1a. If the leaves are flat.go to question 4.
  • 1b. If the leaves are needle-like.go to
    question 2.
  • 2a. Are the needles in a bunch? Go to question
    5
  • 2b. Are they spread along the branch?pine tree
  • Eventually, when enough questions have been
    answered, the identity of the tree is revealed.

64
  • 1a Butterfly exhibits only one color.
    Boring butterfly
  • 1b Butterfly has two or more colors. Go to
    2.
  • 2a. Butterfly has a red body.
  • 2b Butterfly has a black body. Go to 3.
  • 3a. Butterfly contains the color red.
    Inachis io
  • 3b. Butterfly contains the color orange.
    Danaus plexippus

65
Why is Taxonomy Important?
New Discoveries
Unknown species discovered.
Questions
New fossil Uncovered.
How can you answer these questions?
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