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Chapter 18 Classification. What is Classification? Classification is the grouping of objects based on similarities ◦ Classifying Biology and Chemistry.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 18 Classification. What is Classification? Classification is the grouping of objects based on similarities ◦ Classifying Biology and Chemistry."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 18 Classification

2 What is Classification? Classification is the grouping of objects based on similarities ◦ Classifying Biology and Chemistry as Science is a type of classification ◦ We classify organisms to help name them and to create order Taxonomy is the branch of biology that groups and names organisms

3 How did taxonomy begin? What do you call this animal? ◦ Mountain lion, cougar, puma, panther

4 What is Classification? Binomial nomenclature gives each species a two-part scientific name ◦ The first word is the genus, the second is the species ◦ Grizzly bear: Ursus arctos ◦ Polar bear: Ursus maritimus ◦ Giant panda: Alluropoda melanoleuca ◦ Most are Latin ◦ Developed by Carolus Linnaeus in late 1700s

5 What is Classification? Linnaeus’s classification included a hierarchal system with 7 levels Taxon: grouping (categories) of organisms, plural is taxa ◦ Kingdom: taxon of similar phyla ◦ Phylum: taxon of similar classes ◦ Class: taxon of similar orders ◦ Order: taxon of similar families ◦ Family: taxon of similar genera; example cat family is Felidae ◦ Genus: taxon of similar species ◦ Species: specifies organism; Homo sapiens

6 Taxonomy

7 Taxonomy

8 Classification How do we determine how to group organisms together? ◦ What similarities/differences are most important? ◦ How do you classify a dolphin? Is it more similar to a fish or a cat? Darwin’s ideas of evolution led to the study of phylogeny (evolutionary relationships among organisms)

9 Classificantion Grouping organisms based on their evolutionary history is called evolutionary classification ◦ Species with the same genus are more closely related than another genus ◦ Same genus all share a common ancestor ◦ The farther you go up in taxa, the further back the common ancestor was Cladograms show relationships of evolutionary classification

10

11 Cladograms https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ouZ9zEkxG Wg https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ouZ9zEkxG Wg

12 Cladograms

13 Dichotomous Key A dichotomous key is multiple sets of paired statements used to identify organisms http://nationalzoo.si.edu/Education/Conservatio nCentral/walk/walk4.html http://nationalzoo.si.edu/Education/Conservatio nCentral/walk/walk4.html

14 3 Domains Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya Bacteria and Archaea are prokaryotes. ◦ Domain Bacteria has Kingdom Eubacteria. “normal” bacteria ◦ Domain Archaea has Kingdom Archebacteria. “weird” bacteria

15 Eukarya Kingdom Protista ◦ Most are unicellular ◦ Live in moist environments ◦ Diverse in ways they obtain nutrition. Ex. amoebahttp://www.cellsalive.com/parasit.htmhttp://www.cellsalive.com/parasit.htm Kingdom Fungi ◦ Heterotrophic decomposers ◦ Cell walls of chitin, ex. mushroom; picturespictures

16 Eukarya Kingdom Plantae ◦ Autotrophic, multicellular, have tissues ◦ Cell walls of cellulose ◦ Vascular plants – have vessels that transport water and sugars (ferns, conifers, flowering plants)  Xylem – tissue that moves water  Phloem – tissue that moves sugars ◦ Nonvascular plants do not have these vessels., ex. mosses Kingdom Animalia – multicellular heterotrophs. Do NOT have cell walls

17 Classification of Living Things

18 Domain, Kingdom, Phylum… DidDomain KingKingdom PhilipPhylum CrossClass OverOrder ForFamily GoodGenus SoupSpecies


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