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August 2008 Naming Plants “Taxonomy” Source: Introductory Horticulture, fifth ed.. Delmar Publishers. 1997. 2001 AgriTeach.com TM (12901ms)

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Presentation on theme: "August 2008 Naming Plants “Taxonomy” Source: Introductory Horticulture, fifth ed.. Delmar Publishers. 1997. 2001 AgriTeach.com TM (12901ms)"— Presentation transcript:

1 August 2008 Naming Plants “Taxonomy” Source: Introductory Horticulture, fifth ed.. Delmar Publishers. 1997. 2001 AgriTeach.com TM (12901ms)

2 August 2008 Why do we use Latin names? Latin is a “dead language” –Latin is a language that is no longer spoken, so it does not change. There can be many common names for the same plant; or the same common name for two different plants. Latin names are simple, universal, and only have 2 parts.

3 August 2008 Dionaea muscipula = venus flytrap

4 August 2008 The “Binomial” Naming System Binomial: Bi = two, nomial = name Made by the Swedish Botanist Linnaeus First part = genus; ex: Ficus Second part = species; ex: elastica –a.k.a. Rubber Tree

5 August 2008 Other Plant Groups Plants can also be sorted into “families” –Families are groups of genera (plural of genus) –The family “Compositae” includes sunflowers, daisies, mums, and marigolds.

6 August 2008 I’m confused... This is how every plant can be classified –Kindom (All Plants) –Phylum (Seed Plants) –Class (Seeds inside fruit - angiosperms) –Order –Family –Genus –Species (very few plants) –Variety (one plant; specific color, etc.)


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