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Taxonomy Taxonomy – field of classifying organisms & assigning each organism a universally accepted name Binomial nomenclature – 2-word naming system by.

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Presentation on theme: "Taxonomy Taxonomy – field of classifying organisms & assigning each organism a universally accepted name Binomial nomenclature – 2-word naming system by."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Taxonomy Taxonomy – field of classifying organisms & assigning each organism a universally accepted name Binomial nomenclature – 2-word naming system by Carolus Linnaeus Always in italics, first word is capitalized, second word is lowercased. Genus species Example: Homo sapien (human) Ursus arctos Ursus maritimus

3 Taxonomy All life is classified into 3 domains based on common characteristics: Eubacteria: prokaryotes; “true” bacteria; Ex. Pathogens Archaebacteria: prokaryotes; live in extreme environments Eukarya: eukaryotes; Ex. plants, animals, fungi, protists

4 Taxonomy Each domain can be broken down into more and more specific levels based on shared characteristics: Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Thus in binomial nomenclature, we name organisms based on their two most specific names Pause and Play: Great Crash Course video if you want to pause in notes here and show it:

5 Evolutionary History Phylogeny - evolutionary history of a species or a group of related species. Phylogenetic Tree – diagram that biologists use to predict the evolutionary relationships of organisms Organized based on evidence as well as taxonomy Constructed to make the simplest relationships possible

6 Phylogenetic Trees Classifies organisms into major taxa (groups) based on evolutionary relationships. Classifies species in the order in which they descended from a common ancestor using physical characteristics. Trees can show order of species divergence from the common ancestor and some even more specifically show time of divergence.

7 Phylogenetic Trees From a phylogenetic tree we can learn:
Which groups are most closely related Which groups are least closely related Which group diverged first (longest ago)

8 How to Read them Speciation - branching of a family tree
Extinction - loss of one of the branches. Start from the “trunk” – this always represents a common ancestor that all organisms on the tree evolved from Each node represents a more recent common ancestor

9 How NOT to Read them They do not show that A  B  C  D
Ex. Bacteria  Amoeba  Insect  Trout  Human and Bird is NOT correct They do not show A > B > C > D Ex. Humans are not greater than trout which is not greater than insects….etc.

10 Example What do you know from this phylogenetic tree?


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