1 / 16

Chapter 15 - Review Classification Systems

Chapter 15 - Review Classification Systems. Charles Page High School Dr. Stephen L. Cotton. Chapter 15 - Review. Taxonomists try to create taxa that group organisms according to biological importance

tsmall
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 15 - Review Classification Systems

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. Chapter 15 - ReviewClassification Systems Charles Page High School Dr. Stephen L. Cotton

  2. Chapter 15 - Review • Taxonomists try to create taxa that group organisms according to biological importance • From it’s name, you know that the organism Malus sylvestris must be in the species sylvestris • The order to which humans belong is primates

  3. Chapter 15 - Review • In classification, families of plants are grouped into orders • If an organism is multinucleate and does not have it’s cells separated by cell walls, it is a fungi • In classifying organisms, the least clear-cut division is between the eubacteria and anarchaebacteria

  4. Chapter 15 - Review • If you observe a multicellular organism whose cell walls lack cellulose, it is a fungi • If an organism is warmblooded, does it have to be a mammal? no • The common house cat is in the same genus as which of the following: mountain lion

  5. Chapter 15 - Review • Birds, fish, and reptiles are classified as cordata • Multicellular algae are classified in the kingdom plantae • A heterotroph whose cell walls lack chlorophyll is a fungi • If an organism makes it’s own food, it must be a(n) autotroph

  6. Chapter 15 - Review • Members of the kingdom Plantae are multicellular and autotropic • There is strong biochemical evidence that the earliest living things on Earth were prokaryotic • Homo habilis and Homo erectus are not in the same species

  7. Chapter 15 - Review • Today, molds and yeasts are classified as fungi • From their scientific names, Zea mays and Allium cepa, you know that the two organisms are different genera • The organisms that led to the revision of Linnaeus’s original classification system were bacteria

  8. Chapter 15 - Review • Present-day taxonomists attempt to group organisms according to their evolutionary relationships • Each of the following is important in classifying : developing embryos; analogous structures; homologous structures

  9. Chapter 15 - Review • Differences in the structures of hemoglobin among animals resulted from mutations that must have occurred after the ancestors of the various species diverged. • Organic molecules that are almost identical from species to species are hemoglobin

  10. Chapter 15 - Review • An animallike protist, unlike an animal, is unicellular • The most clear-cut division between kingdoms is between the prokaryotic and eukaryotic • An organism that is one-celled, has no nucleus, and has a cell wall without cellulose is a prkaryote

  11. Chapter 15 - Review • The third smallest taxon in the Linnaean system of classification is the family • Hemoglobin is most similar in structure in which of the following: mammals and birds; amphibians and reptiles; fishes and frogs; dogs and lions

  12. Chapter 15 - Review • If an organism is a protist, it must be a(n) eukaryote, unicellular • Today, molds and yeasts are no longer classified as plants • Humans and chimpanzees have DNA that differs in approximately 2% of the nucleotide sequences.

  13. Chapter 15 - Review • Do organisms sometimes need to be reclassified from one taxon to another? yes • If you find an organism that is different from any known specimen, who has the privilege of naming it? You do • Did all organisms evolve from present-day prokaryotes? no

  14. Chapter 15 - Review • Spirogyra crassa and Spirogyra nitida are different species • Scientists who classify organisms on the basis of similarities and differences between homologous structures are called anatomists • Unicellular algae are categorized as ______.

  15. Chapter 15 - Review • The various taxa of plants may have evolved from plantlike protists. • Scientists have identified more than _______ species of organisms on Earth so far.

  16. Chapter 15 - Review • The similarity between the chemical _________ in Felis leo and Felis tigris shows that the two species are closely related.

More Related