1 / 34

Taxonomy (Classification)

Taxonomy (Classification). Carolus Linnaeus -developed the scientific naming system still used today. Taxonomy is the science of naming and classifying organisms. White oak: Quercus alba. A taxon is a group of organisms in a classification system.

chavez
Télécharger la présentation

Taxonomy (Classification)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Taxonomy (Classification)

  2. Carolus Linnaeus -developed the scientific naming system still used today. • Taxonomy is the science of naming and classifying organisms. White oak:Quercus alba • A taxon is a group of organisms in a classification system.

  3. Binomial nomenclature is a two-part scientific naming system. • uses Latin words (universal, unchanging language) • scientific names always written in italics or underlined • two parts are the genus name and species

  4. Genus is the first part of a scientific name. • Genus name is always capitalized. • A species is the second part of a scientific name. • always lowercase • always follows genusname; never written alone • Scientific names are written in • italics or underlined Tyto alba

  5. Scientific names help scientists to communicate. • Some species have very similar common names. • Some species have many common names.

  6. Rhinecanthusaculeatus • - Hawaii – Huma Huma Nuka Nuka Apua’a • - Other Places - Picasso Triggerfish

  7. Linnaeus’ classification system has seven levels. • Each level is included in the level above it. • Levels get increasingly specific from kingdom to species. • Kingdom, phylum, class, order, family genus, species

  8. Levels of Classification 1. Kingdom-largest (least specific) 2. Phylum 3. Class 4. Order 5. Family 6. Genus 7. Species-smallest (most specific) These levels are called taxa (plural for taxon).

  9. Classifying people! 1. Kingdom – Animal 2. Phylum – Chordate (backbones) 3. Class – mammal 4. Order - Primates 5. Family - Hominidae 6. Genus – Homo (man) 7. Species –sapiens (wise) Scientific Name of people: Homo sapiens

  10. How do I remember the order? * Use the sentence: KingsPlayChessOnFunnyGreenSquares OR Keep Players Calm Or Fight Gangster Style OR King Philip Came Over For Good Soup

  11. The Linnaean classification system has limitations. • Linnaeus taxonomy doesn’t account for molecular evidence. • The technology didn’t exist during Linneaus’ time. • Linnaean system based only on physical similarities.

  12. Physical similarities are not always the result of close relationships. • Genetic similarities more accurately show evolutionary relationships. • DNA shows red panda to be more related to raccoon than pandas • 1992 rainbow trout Salmo gairdneri was reclassified as Oncorhynchus mykiss because molecular evidence shows it is more closely related to salmon

  13. Cladistics is classification based on common ancestry. • Phylogeny- evolutionary relationships among organisms that show descent from a common ancestor, not similarities based off of physical characteristics. • evidence from living species, fossil record, and molecular data • shown with branching tree diagrams

  14. Phylogeny

  15. A cladogram is a graphic that shows the evolutionary relationships among a group of organisms.

  16. Plantae Animalia Classification is always a work in progress. • The tree of life shows our most current understanding. • New discoveries can lead to changes in classification. • Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae

  17. Protista Classification is always a work in progress. • The tree of life shows our most current understanding. • New discoveries can lead to changes in classification. • Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae Plantae Animalia • 1866: all single-celled organisms moved to kingdom Protista

  18. Plantae Animalia Protista Monera Classification is always a work in progress. • The tree of life shows our most current understanding. • New discoveries can lead to changes in classification. • Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae • 1866: all single-celled organisms moved to kingdom Protista • 1938: prokaryotes moved to kingdom Monera

  19. Plantae Animalia Protista Fungi Classification is always a work in progress. • The tree of life shows our most current understanding. • New discoveries can lead to changes in classification. • Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae • 1866: all single-celled organisms moved to kingdom Protista • 1938: prokaryotes moved to kingdom Monera • 1959: fungi moved to own kingdom Monera

  20. Plantae Animalia Protista Archea Bacteria Fungi Classification is always a work in progress. • The tree of life shows our most current understanding. • New discoveries can lead to changes in classification. • Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae • 1866: all single-celled organisms moved to kingdom Protista • 1938: prokaryotes moved to kingdom Monera • 1959: fungi moved to own kingdom • 1977: kingdom Monerasplit into kingdoms Bacteria and Archaea

  21. There are 3 domains and 6 kingdoms • Domain Bacteria • Kingdom Eubacteria • Domain Archaea • Kingdom Archaebacteria • Domain Eukarya • Kingdom Protista • Kingdom Fungi • Kingdom Plantae • Kingdom Animalia

  22. Domain Bacteria—Kingdom Eubacteria • Cell type: Prokaryote • Cell structures: Cell walls with peptidoglycan • Number of cells: Unicellular • Mode of nutrition: Autotroph or Heterotroph • Examples:Streptococcus, E. coli • Eubacteria live everywhere. They inhabit your mouth, your skin, your stomach, dirt, desks, floors, etc.. • These are the common bacteria that we refer to as germs. Streptococcus mutans (can cause endocarditis and dental caries) Bacillus anthracis (spores can live in soil for years)

  23. Domain Archaea—Kingdom Archaebacteria • Cell type: Prokaryote • Cell structures: Cell walls without peptidoglycan • Number of cells: Unicellular • Mode of nutrition: Autotroph or Heterotroph • Examples: Methanogens, halophiles, thermophiles • Archaebacteria live in very EXTREME environments. They inhabit volcanic hot springs, black mud with no oxygen, and very salty water. • These are the extreme bacteria that we do not come in contact with frequently.

  24. Domain Eukarya includes all eukaryotes. • kingdom Protista

  25. Domain Eukarya includes all eukaryotes. • kingdom Protista • kingdom Plantae

  26. Domain Eukarya includes all eukaryotes. • kingdom Protista • kingdom Plantae • kingdom Fungi

  27. Domain Eukarya includes all eukaryotes. • kingdom Protista • kingdom Plantae • kingdom Fungi • kingdom Animalia

  28. Kingdom Protista • Cell type: Eukaryote • Cell structures: Some have cell walls of cellulose and some have no cell walls • Number of cells: Most unicellular; some multicellular • Mode of nutrition: Autotroph or Heterotroph • Examples:Amoeba, Paramecium, slime molds, giant kelp, algae • Protists display the greatest variety. If something can’t be classified as anything else, it is placed in this category. • All protists live in some type of water or moist environment (like in moist soil or in your own body!)

  29. Kingdom Fungi • Cell type: Eukaryote • Cell structures: Cell walls of chitin • Number of cells: Most multicellular; some unicellular (like yeast) • Mode of nutrition: Heterotroph • Examples: Mushrooms, yeast, mildew • Fungus is important! We can eat some and it can help make bread, but it can also cause athlete’s foot and other fungal infections. • They like moist environments.

  30. Kingdom Plantae • Cell type: Eukaryote • Cell structures: Cell walls of cellulose; have chloroplasts • Number of cells: Multicellular • Mode of nutrition: Autotroph • Examples: Mosses, ferns, flowering plants • Plants are non-motile, which means they cannot move from place to place Sunflowers in Fargo, North Dakota

  31. Kingdom Animalia • Cell type: Eukaryote • Cell structures: No cell walls • Number of cells: Multicellular • Mode of nutrition: Heterotroph • Examples: Sponges, worms, insects, fishes, mammals • Very diverse!

More Related