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 There are 13 billion known species of organisms  This is only 5% of all organisms that ever lived!  New organisms are still being found and identified.

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Presentation on theme: " There are 13 billion known species of organisms  This is only 5% of all organisms that ever lived!  New organisms are still being found and identified."— Presentation transcript:

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2  There are 13 billion known species of organisms  This is only 5% of all organisms that ever lived!  New organisms are still being found and identified today.

3  Classification is the arrangement of organisms into orderly groups based on their similarities  Classification is also known as taxonomy  Taxonomists are scientists that identify and name organisms

4  Taxonomy has the benefit of classifying organisms accurately and uniformly by assigning scientifically based names  It prevents misnomers such as starfish and jellyfish that aren't really fish  Uses same language (Latin or some Greek) for all names

5  2000 years ago, Aristotle was the first taxonomist  Aristotle divided organisms into plants & animals  He subdivided them by their habitat --- land, sea, or air dwellers

6  Early Taxonomist, John Ray, a botanist, was the first to use Latin for naming plants  His names were very long descriptions telling everything about the plant

7  Carolus Linnaeus 1707 – 1778  18th century taxonomist  Classified organisms by their structure  Developed naming system still used today

8  Called the “Father of Taxonomy”  Developed the modern system of naming known as binomial nomenclature  Each organism has a two-word name (Genus & species)

9  Binomial nomenclature uses Genus and species names  Latin or Greek Italicized in print  Capitalize genus, but NOT species  Underline when writing Turdus migratorius

10  The International Code for Binomial Nomenclature contains the rules for naming organisms  All names must be approved by International Naming Congresses (International Zoological Congress)  This prevents duplicate names

11  There is a hierarchy of groups (taxa) from broadest to most specific  Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, species

12  Broadest, most inclusive group  Three domains  Archaea and Eubacteria are unicellular prokaryotes (no nucleus or membrane- bound organelles)  Eukarya are more complex and have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles

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15  Archaea live in harsh environments and may represent the first cells to have evolved.  Ancient life forms that still survive today  Found in sewage treatment plants and thermal vents  Live in areas without oxygen

16  Eubacteria, only some of which cause human diseases, are present in almost all habitats on Earth.  Many bacteria are important environmentally and commercially.  Eubacteria are found in intestines and help break down food

17  Domain Eukarya is Divided into Kingdoms  Protista (protozoans, algae…)  Fungi (mushrooms, yeasts …)  Plantae (multicellular plants)  Animalia (multicellular animals)

18  Most are unicellular  Some are multicellular  Some are autotrophic, while others are heterotrophic

19  Multicellular (except yeast)  Heterotrophs  Decomposers

20  Multicellular  Autotrophic  Absorb sunlight to make glucose – Photosynthesis  Cell walls made of cellulose

21  Multicellular  Heterotrophs  Feed on plants and/or animals

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23  M.Bregar (Dante C.S.S.)  http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ commons/thumb/7/7d/Haeckel_Siphone ae.jpg/250px-  http://www.oum.ox.ac.uk/thezone/anima ls/animalid/images/class7.gif http://www.authorstream.com/Presentati on/dantescience-287709-classification- living-things-nomeclature-education-ppt- powerpoint/


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