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Classification. I. Carl Linnaeus. Classification System 1. Taxonomy – the science of naming organisms and assigning them to groups a. Similar structural characteristics b. Similar functions & behaviors. 2. Taxa – different levels of classification
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I. Carl Linnaeus • Classification System 1. Taxonomy – the science of naming organisms and assigning them to groups a. Similar structural characteristics b. Similar functions & behaviors
2. Taxa – different levels of classification DOMAIN (3 largest groups – Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya) a. Kingdom – Animalia b. Phylum – Chordata c. Class – Mammalia d. Order – Carnivora e. Family – Felidae f. Genus – Felis g. Species – Domesticus
B. Naming System 1. Binomial nomenclature – two-part scientific name 2. Made up of the organism’s genus and species names 3. House cat – Felis domesticus (if typed) or Felisdomesticus (if written) a. Whole name is in italics or underlined b. Genus is capitalized; species is lowercase
II. Taxonomy Today • Taxonomy & Phylogeny 1. Phylogeny – evolutionary history 2. Species that are closely related by evolution are grouped together 3. Homologous structures – classify more closely together (Human arm & whale flipper) 4. Analogous structures – similar structures that develop separately in organisms not closely related – classified further apart (Bat wing & butterfly wing)
B. Biochemical Taxonomy 1. Compare nucleotide sequence in DNA or RNA 2. Compare amino acid sequence in proteins 3. Similar sequences? Classify together
III. Six Kingdom Classification System • Archaebacteria (Domain Archaea) - Prokaryotic - Unicellular - Auto/Hetero - Some are mobile (flagella) - Methanogens (make methane - found in harsh environments) Halophiles (love salt – Dead Sea) Thermophiles (love heat – hot springs, thermal vents)
http://minst.org/images/23899A.jpg http://filebox.vt.edu/users/chagedor/biol_4684/Microbes/natrono.html Examples of halophilic (salt loving) bacteria
B. Eubacteria (Domain Bacteria) - Pro - Uni - Auto/Hetero - Some are mobile (also by us!) - In your yogurt, on your hands, E. coli in your large intestine, disease-causing like Strep
Streptococcus http://images.encarta.msn.com/xrefmedia/sharemed/targets/images/pho/t028/T028362A.jpg Escherichia coli (E. coli) http://www.astrographics.com/GalleryPrints/Display/GP2144.jpg Bifidobacteria (the kind in your yogurt) http://www.genomenewsnetwork.org/gnn_images/news_content/10_02/bifido/bifido_1.jpg
C. Protista - Eu - Uni (multi – colony) - Auto/Hetero - Yes (cilia or flagella) - Amoeba, paramecium, euglena
http://arnica.csustan.edu/Biol1010/classification/euglena.JPGhttp://arnica.csustan.edu/Biol1010/classification/euglena.JPG Euglena Amoeba http://greggsutter.com/mt/archives/freelivingameoba.jpg Paramecium http://upsidedownhippo.com/archives/Paramecium.jpg
D. Fungi - Eu - Multi - Hetero - Not mobile - Mushrooms, ringworm, athlete’s foot, mold
Microsporum gypseum (Causes ringworm) http://photography.nationalgeographic.com/staticfiles/NGS/Shared/StaticFiles/Photography/Images/POD/r/ringworm-fungus-522315-lw.jpg Mushroom http://www.seattle.net/media/mushroom-thumb.jpg Microsporum canis(Causes athlete’s foot) www.provlab.ab.ca/mycol/image/derm/mcanmic.jpg
E. Plantae - Eu - Multi - Auto (photosynthesis) - Not mobile - Mosses, ferns, flowering plants
F. Animalia - Eu - Multi - Hetero - Yes - Sponges, worms, insects, mammals, etc.