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CLASSIFICATION Organization of things/organisms into related groups based on similarities.

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1 CLASSIFICATION Organization of things/organisms into related groups based on similarities

2 Taxonomy Branch of Biology concerned with…
Grouping and naming of organisms according to characteristics and evolutionary history

3 HISTORY-ARISTOTLE First to classify organisms Greek Philosopher
350 B.C.

4 Aristotle’s Classification
Plants BY SIZE Trees Shrubs Herbs Animals BY HABITAT Water Land Air

5 Carolus Linnaeus 1700’s Swedish botanist
Parents wanted him to be a priest like father Studied medicine and many other things Noted for being instrumental in classifying organisms

6 Linnaeus and Classification
Used morphology (form and structure) to group Ex- flowering plant’s reproductive systems – asexual or sexual reproduction 2 groups - plants and animals Used Scientific Names ( Latin) Binomial Nomenclature: 2 name naming system Genus and species

7 Why Latin? Language of educated in his day
Still use it because no longer spoken language so it will never change No slang words Universal understanding

8 What is it? Cougar, Puma, Panther, Mountain Lion, Catamount

9 Common Name -Common Name -confusing/misleading Ex. Polecat
-doesn’t show relationships -more than one name

10 Scientific Name Latin Standard name -show relationships
Ex: Felis concolor Puma concolor Italics or underline Genus capitalized

11 Why Classify? 1. Shows relationships between living and once living things 2. Brings order to diversity 3. Explains evolutionary patterns 4. Gives organisms specific names 5. Provides means to identify unknown organisms

12 Classification Categories (taxa) 7 levels of organization
Each one is smaller than the previous one (fewer types of organisms) Kingdom Phylum Class Order- Family Genus Species-single organism that can reproduce with one another Varieties -subset of species - peaches, nectarines Subvarieties-variation of a species in diff geographic areas

13 Human Taxa Kingdom animalia Phylum chordata Class mammalia
Order primate Family hominidae Genus Homo Species sapiens

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15 Use of Evolution to determine Relationships
Check it out!!

16 Phylogenic Trees Shows evolutionary history of species
Determined by shared characteristics: structures: larval forms and embryos biochemistry: # amino acids in common behavior patterns: habitats and mating calls cell organization: prokaryote/eukaryote

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19 Problems with classifying
Many organisms have similar structure Isolation may make organisms unique New discoveries made constantly Organisms may fit into more than one category Man-made system (human error)

20 Linking organisms together
The more categories in common the closer the relationships

21 6 Kingdoms Archaebacteria Eubacteria Protista Fungi Plants Animals

22 Key Terms Prokaryote- unicellular, without membrane bound organelles, no true nucleus Eukaryote-organism with membrane bound organelles Autotroph-organism capable of making organic nutrients directly from inorganic Hetertroph- organism that gets energy from other sources other than itself

23 Monerans ( 5 kingdom system)
Archaebacteria ( in 6 kingdom) Eubacteria ( in 6 kingdom)

24 Archaebacteria Unicellular, prokaryote, anaerobic, and aerobic
Adapted to extreme environments (temp, acidity, salinity) Binary fission Some autotrophic (chemosynthesis)

25 Eubacteria Unicellular, prokaryotes, anaerobic and aerobic
Binary fission Heterotrophs , some photosynthetic or chemosynthetic Cell walls (different from plants) Bacteria and blue green bacteria

26 Protista Eukaryotes (membrane bound organelles)
Single celled and multicellular Plant-like, fungus-like, animal-like Lack specialized tissue Live in moist areas Autotrophic and heterotrophic Some with cell walls Sexual and asexual reproduction Ex: amoeba, paramecium, euglena algae

27 Fungus Heterotrophic, unicellular (yeast) and multicellular eukaryotes
Absorbs nutrients-dead matter Cell wall chitin Sexual/asexual reproduction Mostly terrestrial Ex: mushrooms, puffballs, rusts, smuts, mildew, mold

28 Plantae Multicellular, autotrophic, eukaryotic Mostly terrestrial
Specialized tissues and organs Cell walls of cellulose Chlorophyll in chloroplasts Alternation of generations between diploid and haploid Ex: moss, ferns, conifers, flowering plants

29 Animalia Multicellular, heterotrophic, eukaryotes
Specialized tissues, some have organs and organ systems Nutrition by ingestion Sexual reproduction based on meiosis No cell walls or chloroplasts Sensory structures or organs Muscle systems for movement Aquatic or terrestrial

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