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CLASSIFYING ORGANISMS How hard would it be to find what you needed in this room? Especially if you had to find it in a hurry. It is not very organized.

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Presentation on theme: "CLASSIFYING ORGANISMS How hard would it be to find what you needed in this room? Especially if you had to find it in a hurry. It is not very organized."— Presentation transcript:

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2 CLASSIFYING ORGANISMS How hard would it be to find what you needed in this room? Especially if you had to find it in a hurry. It is not very organized.

3 Classifying Organisms This room is very organized. Would you be able to easily find what you needed in this room? Probably, right?

4 Classifying Organisms Scientists organize things as well. They have used a system of organization they call CLASSIFICATION. Classification is the grouping of organisms based upon their similar properties.

5 Classifying Organisms How would you organize these things?

6 Classifying Organisms I would have grouped all the spiders in one group and all of the butterflies in a different group. Is that what you did? There are many ways you could group them. It is easy to group spiders together; you can group them by the number of legs they have. Spiders have 8 legs. You might have grouped butterflies together because of their wings.

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8 Classifying Organisms The system scientists use to classify organisms has seven levels. 1 KINGDOM 2 PHYLUM 3 CLASS 4 ORDER 5 FAMILY 6 GENUS 7 SPECIES

9 King Philip Came Over For Great Spaghetti Keeping Precious Creatures Organized For Grumpy Scientists King Phillip Came Over From Greece Saturday Here are a few ways to help you remember the classification system… kingdom Kids Phylum Prefer Class Candy Order Over Family Fresh Genus Green Species Spinach

10 LET’S SEE HOW HUMANS ARE CLASSIFIED IN THIS SYSTEM kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Primates Family Hominidae Genus Homo Species Homo sapiens

11 CLASSIFICATION Aristotle was the first scientist who attempted to classify organisms. He developed a system that classified organisms as either plants or animals.

12 Classification He then divided them into smaller classifications. For example, he divided animals according to where they lived the most…air, land or water.

13 We don’t classify them that way today. Think about some of the animals that live in the air. They include things like eagles, mosquitoes, and bats. We know today that these animals are not closely related. Mosquitoes are insects, eagles are birds, and bats are mammals. They are very different. Classification

14 Modern Classification So, a new system was developed by a guy named Carolus Linnaeus; call him Carl for short. He was a Swedish botanist. He classified organisms by physical and structural similarities, and we still use his system today.

15 Modern Classification The modern system has changed over time. We used to have 5 Kingdoms, Moneran, Protista, Plantae, Fungi, Animalia, but with the discovery of certain microscopic organisms we now have 6. OLDNEW

16 NEW CLASSIFICATION It is not important to memorize the six kingdoms right now. But you can see them below. Archaebacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Eubacteria and Animalia. Archaebacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Eubacteria and Animalia. There is a saying some people use to remember them. All People Find Pizza Extremely Appetizing

17 Remember the Human Classification? kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Primates Family Hominidae Genus Homo Species Homo sapiens Humans are a part of the animal kingdom, but as you move through the system of classification each step gets more specific. The phylum humans are in include only animals with backbones. The class humans are in is mammalia, or mammals. The organisms in this class have backbones and they have hair on their bodies and feed their young with mother’s milk.

18 Classification The last two levels in the classification system are Genus and Species. Scientists use these two to name all organisms. It is like having a first name and last name. It is called BINOMIAL CLASSIFICATION

19 These organisms are similar but they are not the same. Their Genus name is the same because they are very similar, it is Canis. However their species name is different. The dog is Canis familiaris. The wolf’s name is Canis lupis. No other animal can have the same genus and species name. Genus and Species names

20 KEYS: A Tool of Classification Scientists can use genetics, evolution, or physical characteristics to classify organisms. Each one has a different tool. There are cladograms, phylogenetic trees, and dichotomous keys to name just a few.

21 KEYS AND CLASSIFICATIONS We are most interested in using physical characteristics to identify organisms. A typical tool would be the dichotomous key. A DICHOTOMOUS KEY is a tool for identifying a species by going through a series of choices that leads to the right name.

22 BRIEF SUMMARY SLIDE  All organisms are classified by their structural similarities.  Carolus Linnaeus created the system we use to classify organisms today.  Organisms are classified into 7 levels: Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species.  The Kingdoms are the most general and the genus and species are unique to each organism.


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