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Animal Classification, Phylogeny, and Organization

Animal Classification, Phylogeny, and Organization. Cladistics & Taxonomy. Animal Systematics. The goal of animal systematics is to arrange animals into groups that reflect evolutionary relationships. How might you group the animals in the picture? One way to group them is by using

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Animal Classification, Phylogeny, and Organization

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  1. Animal Classification, Phylogeny, and Organization Cladistics & Taxonomy

  2. Animal Systematics • The goal of animal systematics is to arrange animals into groups that reflect evolutionary relationships. • How might you group the animals in the picture? • One way to group them is by using phylogenetic systematics, otherwise known as cladistics. • Phylogeny refers to the evolutionary ancestry of animals; how they are related to a common ancestor. • Cladistics uses the phylogeny of animals to group them according to homologous characters. • Character – anything with a genetic basis that can be measured, i.e., anatomy, morphology, or DNA itself.

  3. Cladistics • Cladistics focuses on monophyletic groups. • A monophyletic group refers to a single ancestor species and all of its descendants. • Diagrams called cladograms are used to represent the phylogeny of organisms.

  4. Characters • Symplesiomorphy – a homologous character shared by all members of a monophyletic group. • Synapomorphy – a derived character that has arisen after a symplesiomorphy visible in a given outgroup. Groups that share a certain synapomorphy are called a clade.

  5. Cats are more similar to dogs than they are to frogs, because they share a more recent common ancestor with dogs

  6. Practice Cladogram

  7. Construct a Cladogram

  8. Gorilla Chimpanzee Tail Lost Fur Four Limbs Tiger Lizard Fish

  9. Cladogram Showing Vertebrate Phylogeny

  10. Classification • Organisms can be classified according to their relatedness to other organisms. • The accepted classifications among scientists are called taxonomy. • Taxonomy is a hierarchical system. This means that you start very general and get more specific as you proceed down the list. Example - The grocery store is set up the same way!

  11. Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species

  12. Current Biological Classifications • Kingdom King • Phylum Philip • Class Came • Order Over • Family For • Genus Grape • Species Soda

  13. Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Animalia Chordata Mammalia Primates Hominidae Homo sapiens Example: Human

  14. Binomial Nomenclature • Bi – 2 • Nomen – name • The first name is always the GENUS • The second name is always the SPECIES • Thus, our binomial nomenclature is homo sapiens. • The binomial nomenclature of a house cat is felis catus. • The binomial nomenclature of a killer whale is orcinus orca.

  15. Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Subspecies Animalia Chordata Mammalia Carnivora Canidae Canis lupus familiaris Example: Dog

  16. The 5 Kingdoms • Kingdom: • Monera – true bacteria and cyanobacteria • Protista – eukaryotic, unicellular or colonial, usually motile, microscopic in size (amoeba, paramecium, etc.) • Plantae – eukaryotic, multicellular, photosynthetic, have cell walls, nonmotile • Fungi – eukaryotic, multicellular, decomposer, have cell walls, usually nonmotile • Animalia – eukaryotic, multicellular, heterotrophic, no cell walls, motile, specialized tissues

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