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2. Taxonomy Study of classifying organisms

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1 2. Taxonomy Study of classifying organisms
Binomial Nomenclature Vs (modern) Taxonomy

2 Binomial Nomenclature
Old / used as scientific naming By Carolus Linnaeus (Swedish) Based on shared physical characteristics & homologous (similar) structure, mostly morphology Genus Species 2 kingdoms: plantae & animalia Ex: Homo sapiens

3 Taxonomy New / used as scientific classification By modern scientists
Based on biochemical (DNA), evolutionary (common ancestors) & embryological (embryos) relationships, mostly phylogenetic tree Kingdom phylum class order family genus species 5 kingdom: monera, protista, fimigi, plantae, animalia Ex: Animalia chordate mammal primates hominidae homo sapiens

4 DNA genetic code / nucleic acid that stores and transmits the genetic
information from one generation to the next. double helix which is made up of units called nucleotides. each nucleotide consists of 3 parts: a 5-carbon sugar (deoxyribose), a phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base. four nitrogenous bases: Adenine (A), Thymine (T), Guanine (G) and Cytosine (C). pairing of nitrogenous bases: A-T / C-G (Pg. 142) Replication: DNA double helix separates – two strands – separated strands as a template for RNA and protein synthesis. DNA function: DNA is responsible for the size, shape and function of every protein a cell makes. (All Enzymes are proteins) Protein Synthesis: DNA – template / signal to RNA – messenger RNA / transfer RNA / amino acids – correct sequence (codon = 3 nucleotides in mRNA / GCU, AAU – protein molecules RNA contains the sugar ribose, single-stranded and Uracil (U) instead of thymine

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6 Cell Structure Q: Why do plant cells have cell walls and animal cells don’t?

7 SCIENTIFIC CLASSIFICATION OVERVIEW
Scientists use seven basic levels of classification (1 taxon, 7 taxa) KINGDOM PHYLUM CLASS ORDER FAMILY GENUS SPECIES • Kings Play Chess On Funny Green Squares. • King Phillip Came Over For Good Spaghetti.

8 Genus name + species name
Most taxonomists use a five kingdom system of classification. 1. MONERA 2. PROTISTA 3. FUNGI 4. PLANTAE 5. ANIMALIA NAMING ORGANISMS Scientists name organisms using binomial nomenclature. Genus name + species name The genus name is capitalized. The species name is not capitalized Both names are in italics or underlined.

9 KINGDOM, PHYLUM, CLASS, ORDER, FAMILY, GENUS, SPECIES

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13 Fungi Plantae Animalia
Scientific Classification Overview: Eukaryotes – have nucleus & membrane bound organelles Fungi Plantae Animalia Uni / multicellular - no cellulose - no photosynthesis Multicellular - cellulose - photosynthesis Multicellular - no cell walls - no photosynthesis Ex: Mushrooms Ex: Maple Ex: Human Protista Unicellular / features of both plants & animals Ex: Ameba & Paramecia Prokaryotes – have no nucleus or membrane bound organelles Monera Bacteria / No well-defined internal parts Eubacteria Archaebacteria Unicellular, O2 required for photosynthesis Unicellular, No O2 required for photosynthesis

14 Phylogenetic Tree Diagram that shows evolutionary relationships of organisms and their ancestors. Ex: 3 4 A 2 B 1 5 C D E Which two modern organisms are likely to be most closely related? What was the most recent common ancestor of organisms 2 and 3? What was the most recent common ancestor of organisms 1 and 5?

15 Method of Identification
Used to quickly identify an organism by professional and amateur biologists The dichotomous key: identifying objects / organisms through a series of paired, contrasting statements until you are directed to the name of the object or organism. Ex: All backboned animals With feathers (birds) Without feathers With hair (mammals) Without hair With fins (fish) Without fins With scales (reptiles) Without scales (amphibians) Ex: Snake (Pg. 300)

16 This exercise will help you prepare information needed to start your poster project.
Use the following key to label the diagram below: A = Kingdom Monera C = Kingdom Fungi D = Kingdom Plantae A1 = Monerans C1 = Molds and Yeasts D1 = Plants B = Kingdom Protista E = Kingdom Animalia B1 = Protistans E1 = Animals

17 example members of each kingdom.
2. Use your textbook and/or the Internet to list the main characteristics and example members of each kingdom. • Main characteristics of the Kingdom MONERA (procaryotes) Example Monerans: bacteria and blue-green algae • Main characteristics of the Kingdom PROTISTA (single-celled eucaryotes) Example Protists: amebas and diatoms • Main characteristics of the Kingdom FUNGI (cell walls / heterotrophs, no chlorophyll or cellulose) Example Fungi : bread mold and mushrooms • Main characteristics of the Kingdom PLANTAE (multicellular / photosynthetic) Example Plants: mosses, ferns, and plants • Main characteristics of the Kingdom ANIMALIA (multicellular eucaryotes / obtain food mainly by ingestion) Example Animals: human, cats, dogs, etc…

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