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Naming organisms Aristotle was the first to classify  Plants and animals Animals were blood and bloodless  How they moved  Very primitive.

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Presentation on theme: "Naming organisms Aristotle was the first to classify  Plants and animals Animals were blood and bloodless  How they moved  Very primitive."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Naming organisms Aristotle was the first to classify  Plants and animals Animals were blood and bloodless  How they moved  Very primitive

3 Naming Organisms Carolus Linnaeus  Swedish  Divided into Animal and Plant Kingdom  Divided into even small groups  Came up with naming system Binomial nomenclature 2 names Genus and species Genus always CAPITALIZED, species lowercase If written, underlined or typed italics All organisms have a common name (like “humans” and a scientific name “Homo sapiens”

4 Naming Organisms Today we have 6 major kingdoms  This is recent  Animals are divided now not only based on looks, but on genetics.  Video on Linnaeus Video on Linnaeus

5 Hierarchy Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species

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7 6 Kingdoms 1.Archaebacteria 2.Eubacteria(bacteria) 3.Protista 4.Fungi 5.Plantae 6.Animalia Monera

8 Kingdom Animalia All members are eukaryotic All members are heterotrophic All members are multicellular All members can move at some point in their lives MOST have specialized tissue

9 Animal Cell Structure

10 Asexual Reproduction Only 1 parent No special reproductive organs Genetically identical offspring (unless a mutation occurs)  Called clones Typically very rapid No gametes (egg or sperm) Some invertebrates do this such a hydra

11 Types of Asexual Reproduction Binary Fission- Only bacteria and protozoa does this (no animals)  Split by mitosis

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13 Types of asexual reproduction Multiple fission: nucleus divides repeatedly before division making many young. Does not occur in animal kingdom

14 Types of Asexual Reproduction Budding  Unequal division  Parent develops outgrowth or bud  Bud grows organs and detaches  Cnidarians like hydra

15 Types of Asexual Reproduction Gemmulation  Make a gemmule Cells surrounded by a resistant capsule form Fresh water sponges do this

16 Types of Asexual reproduction Fragmentation  Multicellular animal breaks into 2 or more parts  Each fragment becomes an individual  Planarians and other worms

17 Sexual Reproduction Production of offspring from 2 parents Form gametes (egg and sperm) through meiosis Takes more energy, but better way to reproduce  Creates genetic variation

18 Sexual Reproduction Types Production of offspring from the union of 2 gametes from 2 genetically different parents  Meiosis Makes sex cells Egg and sperm  Male and female

19 Sexes (male and female) When an organism displays 2 different sexes (male and female) it is called dioecious When an organism has both sex parts we call it monecious or hermaphroditic.  Flatworms, annelids, barnacles and some fishes are common for this.  Some fertilize themselves; many don’t Some can change sexes- sequential hermaphrodites (genetically programmed)

20 Sexual Reproduction Parthenogenesis  Embryo from unfertilized eggs form  Not as common Some sharks and fish Some worms Some insects Some crustaceans

21 Sexual Reproduction 3 types of offspring formation  Oviparous-egg birth Fertilization may be internal or external  Ovoviviparous- egg birth but the egg is retained in the body while development occurs Certain fishes and reptiles  Viviparous-egg develops in oviduct or uterus


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