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Discover the significance of classification in organizing and naming living organisms. From early methods to modern taxonomy, learn about binomial nomenclature, scientific naming rules, and the 8 levels of taxonomy. Explore why scientists need a consistent naming protocol and the essence of classifying items. Test your understanding with questions and delve into the kingdom criteria and quick vocabulary lesson. Uncover the common terms used in classification and understand the key principles behind naming and grouping diverse life forms.
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Why do we classify things? • Supermarket aisles • Libraries • Classes • Teams/sports • Members of a family • Roads • Cities • Money
What is classification? • Classification: putting things into orderly groups based on similar characteristics • Taxonomy: the science of describing, naming, and classifying organisms
Early classification • Aristotle grouped everything into simple groups such as animals or plants • He then grouped animals according to if they had blood or didn’t have blood, and if they had live young or laid eggs, and so on…
Binomial Nomenclature • Developed by Carolus Linnaeus • Swedish Biologist 1700’s • Two-name system • Genus and species named using Latin or Greek words
Rules used to write scientific names Homo sapiens • An organism’s genus is always written first; the organism’s species is always written second • The genus is Capitalized; the species is written in lower case • Scientific names of organisms are always italicized or underlined
Modern Taxonomy The Evidence used to classify into taxon groups • 1) Embryology • 2) Chromosomes / DNA • 3) Biochemistry • 4) Physiology • 5) Evolution • 6) Behavior
The modern system of classification has 8 levels: • Domain • Kingdom • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Genus • Species
Helpful way to remember the 8 levels • Dumb kids playing catch on freeways get squashed • Or…make up your own… • D K P C O F G S
Why do we need to classify? • Imagine a store…..how do you know where to find the milk or the cereal? Are they in the same aisle? How is the store “organized”? Are all stores similar? • Imagine your computer or mp3 player…..are all of your songs and files in a single folder or do you have them grouped in some way?
When you have a lot of information, it is best to organize and group items so that you can find them easier or easily see their relationship to other items ….this is why we CLASSIFY Even websites must organize their products
Scientists also need a way to *NAME* organisms • The “common names” used by people can sometimes be misleading or confusing • In order to communicate effectively, biologists need a CONSISTENT naming protocol. • *Check out these slides of confusing names…..
Photo Credits Sea Lion: Bill Lim Ant Lion: AmphioxusLion: law_keven Sea Lion? Antlion? Lion?
Which one of these is NOT actually a bear? Photo Credits Panda: Chi King Koala: Belgianchocolate Black Bear: SparkyLeigh
What kind of organism is it?(invertebrate, mammal, insect, fish, reptile..) Sea Monkey Firefly Ringworm Jellyfish Spider monkey Crayfish Sea Horse Photo Credit: Audringje; flickr
Consider this……….. • Are all “Grey Wolves” grey? • Are all “Black Bears” black? • Which is more venomous – a water moccasin or a cottonmouth? Grey wolves can be white, black and any shade of gray. Black bears can also be brown or gray A cottonmouth and a water moccasin are the same animal – the names vary by region.
Humans The scientific name is always the genus + species Humans = Homo sapiens Photo by atomicshark
More on Naming.. • The system of naming is called BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE - which means it is a 2-name system. • Scientific names must either be underlined or italicized • The genus is always capitalized, the species is lowercase • Can be abbreviated. Ex. F. leo and F. tigris
What is a species? Defined as organisms that can interbreed with one another, and produce fertile offspring
When two organisms of different species interbreed, the offspring is called a HYBRID Example: ligers and mules
Check for Understanding 1. Fill in the blanks: ______________, Kingdom, _____________, Class, Order, ________________, Genus, _______________ 2. Which two groups are used for an organism's scientific name? 3. Which of the following pairs is MOST closely related? Acer rubrum & Acer saccharum Acer rubrum & Chenopodium rubrum 4. The system we use for naming is called ____________ nomenclature. 5. The science of classification is called ________________
The Kingdoms There are currently 6 kingdoms
Classification into a kingdom is based on certain criteria -Number of cells (unicellular or multicellular) -How it obtains energy(heterotroph or autotroph) -Type of cell (eukaryote or prokaryote)
Quick Vocabulary Lesson • 1. Heterotroph _______________________________ • 2. Autotroph ________________________________ • 3. Unicellular ________________________________4. Multicellular ________________________________ • Prokaryote ________________________________ • Eukaryote _________________________________
1. Heterotroph: Organism that is unable to make its own food and must consume other organisms • 2. Autotroph: Organism that is capable of making its own food through photosynthesis • 3. Unicellular: single-celled organism • 4. Multicellular: organism made of two or more cells • 5. Prokaryote ________________________________ • 6. Eukaryote _________________________________ • Eukaryotes are organisms, including humans, whose cells have a well defined membrane bound nucleus (containing chromosomal DNA) and organelles. The division between prokaryotes and eukaryotes reflects the existence of two discrete levels of cellular organization.
Kingdom Animalia Photo by Tambako the Jaguar • Multicellular • Heterotrophic • Eukaryotes • Most can move • Examples: birds, insects, worms, mammals, reptiles, humans, anemones Photo by Eduardo Amorim
Kingdom Plantae • Multicellular • Autotrophic • Eukaryotes • Cannot move (due to cell walls) • Examples: flowers, trees, ferns,mosses
Kingdom Fungae • Multicellular (most) • Heterotrophic (mainly decomposers) • Eukaryotic • Examples: mushrooms, yeast, molds Photos by nutmeg66
Kingdom Protista • Most are unicellular • Can be heterotrophic or autotrophic • Eukaryotes (all have nucleus) • Examples: Ameba, paramecium, euglena, algae • Most live in water Photo of Ameba by PROYECTO AGUA **/** WATER PROJECT
Kingdom Eubacteria & Kingdom Archaebacteria • Unicellular • Can be autotrophic or heterotrophic • Prokaryotes (do not have a nucleus) Eubacteria = common bacteria (E. coli, Salmonella) Archaebacteria = “ancient bacteria”, exist in extreme environments
Three Domain System Recently, scientists have added a group above Kingdom. Three groups, called DOMAINS, contain each of the six kingdoms. Domain Eukarya - includes organisms composed of eukaryotic cells (plants, animals, fungi, protists) Domain Bacteria - includes all prokaryotic cells, Kingdom Eubacteria Domain Archaea - includes only "ancient" bacteria, Archaebacteria
Using the Classification System Field guides help identify organisms. -they highlight differences between similar organisms (like trees) Taxonomic Key (Dichotomous Key) -paired statements that describe the physical characteristics of different organisms
Taxonomic Key • 1a Fruits occur singly ................................................. Go to 3 • 1b Fruits occur in clusters of two or more ................ Go to 2 • 2a Fruits are round ................................................... Grapes • 2b Fruits are elongate ............................................... Bananas • 3a Thick skin that separates easily from flesh .........Oranges • 3b Thin skin that adheres to flesh .............................. Go to 4 • 4a More than one seed per fruit ............................ Apples • 4b One seed per fruit ............................................ Go to 5 • 5a Skin covered with fuzz.................... Peaches • 5b Skin smooth, without fuzz........................... Plums What steps would you use to identify an apple?