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What are some ways you are classified?. genderagesocial security numberincomestate/area of residenceprofession. Why Classify??. Human nature- we love to put things in their place!OrganizationIdentificationLess ConfusionShow Relationships. Modern Classification. LinnaeusBinomial nomenclatureTaxon (taxa)phylogenetics- the tracing of evolutionary relationships.
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1. Scientific Classification What’s In a Name??
2. What are some ways you are classified? gender
age
social security number
income
state/area of residence
profession
3. Why Classify?? Human nature- we love to put things in their place!
Organization
Identification
Less Confusion
Show Relationships
4. Modern Classification Linnaeus
Binomial nomenclature
Taxon (taxa)
phylogenetics- the tracing of evolutionary relationships
5. Aristotle- air, water, land
Plants and animals- bacteria discovered and put with animals
5 kingdom- prokaryotic vs. eukaryoticAristotle- air, water, land
Plants and animals- bacteria discovered and put with animals
5 kingdom- prokaryotic vs. eukaryotic
6. Early history of life Solar system~ 12 billion years ago (bya)
Earth~ 4.5 bya
Life~ 3.5 to 4.0 bya
Prokaryotes~ 3.5 to 2.0 bya stromatolites
Oxygen accumulation~ 2.7 bya photosynthetic cyanobacteria
Eukaryotic life~ 2.1 bya
Muticelluar eukaryotes~ 1.2 bya
Animal diversity~ 543 mya
Land colonization~ 500 mya
7. Bacteria Kingdom: Monera?
Domain: Bacteria
Domain: Archaea
Prokaryotic- no membrane-bound organelles, microscopic
Shape
•cocci (sphere)
•bacilli (rod)
•helical (spiral)
8. Archaea Vs. Eubacteria Domain Archaea
no membrane- bound organelles (prok.)
no peptidoglycan
do not respond to antibiotics
extremophiles
chemoautotrophs, heterotrophs
3 main groups: methanogens, extreme halophiles, extreme thermophiles
Domain Eubacteria
no membrane-bound organelles (prok.)
peptidoglycan in cell walls
growth inhibited by antibiotics
diverse metabolism
5 main groups: spirochetes, chlamydias, gram+, cyanobacteria, proteobacteria
9. Prokaryotes Decomposers: unlock organics from corpses and waste products
Symbiosis~ •symbiont/host •mutualism (+, +) •parasitism (+, -) •commensalism (+, 0)
Disease •opportunistic: normal residents of host; cause illness when defenses are weakened •Koch’s postulates: criteria for bacterial disease confirmation
•exotoxins: bacterial proteins that can produce disease w/o the prokaryote present (botulism) •endotoxins: components of gram - membranes (Salmonella)
10. Enter Eukaryotes- Domain Eukarya nucleus
membrane-bound organelles
larger in size than prokaryotic cells
fungus, plant, and animal cells
11. Kingdom Protista (Domain Eukarya) Ingestive (animal-like); protozoa
Absorptive (fungus-like)
Photosynthetic (plant-like); alga
12. Kingdom Plantae (Domain Eukarya) bryophytes (mosses), pteridophytes (ferns), gymnosperms (pines and conifers); angiosperms (flowering plants)
Plants: multicellular, eukaryotic, photosynthetic autotrophs
Terrestrial colonization:
Vascular tissue
The seed
The flower
13. Gymnosperms (Kingdom Plantae) Cone-bearing plants
Lack enclosed chambers (ovaries) for seeds
Ovules and seeds develop on specialized leaves called sporophylls
Ginkgo, cycads, and conifers
All are “evergreens”
Needle-shaped leaves
Vascular tissue refinement: tracheids~ water conducting and supportive element of xylem
14. Angiosperms (Kingdom Plantae) Most diverse and geographically widespread of all plants
“Flowering plants”(Phy: Anthophyta)
Monocots: 1 embryonic seed leaf (lilies, palms, grasses, grain crops)
Dicots: 2 embryonic seed leaves (roses, peas, sunflowers, oaks, maples)
Vascular tissue refinement: vessel elements/fiber cells
15. Kingdom Fungi (Domain Eukarya) Heterotrophic by absorption (exoenzymes)
Decomposers (saprobes), parasites, mutualistic symbionts (lichens)
Hyphae: body filaments •septate (cross walls) •coenocytic (no cross walls)
Mycelium: network of hyphae
Chitin cell walls (polysaccharide)
16. Fungi Diversity, I Phy: Chytridiomycota •aquatic fungi; chytrids •lineage closest to protists (flagella)
Phy: Zygomycota •Rhizopus (food mold) •mycorrhizae: mutualistic with plant roots •zygosporangia: resistant structure (freezing and drying)
17. Fungi Diversity, II Phy.: Ascomycota •sac fungi • yeasts, truffles, morels, Sordaria •asci: sexual spores •conidia: asexual spores
Phy.: Basidiomycota • club fungus •mushrooms, puffballs, shelf fungus, rusts •basidiocarps: produce sexual spores
18. Kingdom Animalia (Domain Eukarya) heterotrophic
most are mobile
ingestion followed by digestion
multicellular (most have tissues)
lack cell walls
sexual reproduction
35 phyla- most are marine
19. Animal phylogeny & diversity Monophyletic; colonial flagellated protist ancestor
1- Parazoa-Eumetazoa dichotomy: sponges (Parazoa)~ no true tissues; all other animals (Eumetazoa)~ true tissues
2- Radiata-Bilateria dichotomy: Cnidaria (hydra; ‘jellyfish’; sea anemones) & Ctenophora (comb jellies)~ radial body symmetry; all other animals~ bilateral body symmetry (also: cephalization)
20. Summary 3 Domains- but textbooks are behind: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya
6 kingdom system in most texts: Eubacteria, Archaea, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia
classification now based on evolutionary history