Title: Advanced Biology
1Advanced Biology
- Chapter 18
- Classification
2Advanced BiologyChapter 18 Classification
- 18-1 History of Taxonomy
- 18-2 Modern Phylogenetic Taxonomy
- 18-3 Two Modern Systems of Classification
318-1 History of Taxonomy
- What is Taxonomy?
- Early Systems of Classification
- Phylogeny
4Taxonomy
- The branch of biology that names and groups
organisms according to their characteristics and
evolutionary history. - Classify the thousands of new species discovered
each year. - Biologists use the characteristics of newly
discovered species to classify it with organisms
having similar characteristics. - The way we group organisms today continues to
change and reflect the evolutionary history of
organisms.
5Early Systems of Classification
6Aristotle
- Greek Philosopher 384-322 BC
- First classified organisms more than 2000yrs ago
as either plants or animals. - Animals land dwellers, water dwellers, or air
dwellers. - Plants three categories based on differences in
their stems.
7Aristotle
8Carolus Linnaeus
- Swedish naturalist (1707-1778)
- Devised a system of grouping organisms into
hierarchical categories. Nested hierarchy. - Used an organisms morphology (form and
structure)
9Levels of Classification
- Kingdom
- Phylum or Division
- Class
- Order
- Family
- Genus
- Species
10Under the modern Linnaean system, the
classification of an organism places the organism
within a nested hierarchy of taxa. The hierarchy
ranges from the most general category (domain) to
the most specific (species).
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12Binomial Nomenclature
- Scientific Name has two parts.
- 1st part is the genus
- 2nd part is the species which is the identifier
or descriptive word. - Genus name is capitalized and both names are
underlined or written in italics. - Latin used by all scientists as a standard.
- Linnaeus classified 1000s of organisms. Versions
of his system are still used today.
13Scientific Names
- May describe the organism, suggest geographic
range, or honor a person - Homo sapiens (sapiens wise)
- Chaos chaos (amoeba never appear the same shape)
- Linnaea borealis (Linnaeus favorite, borealis
northern)
14Seven-level System was arbitrary
- There is significant variation in some species to
establish additional levels.
15Tomato varieties
- Botany a species may be split into subsets known
as varieties. Example peaches and nectarines are
both varieties of Prunis persica.
16- Zoology variations of a species that occur in
different geographical areas. Example Terrapene
Carolina triungui is a subspecies of the common
eastern box turtle Terrapene Carolina that has 3
rather than 4 toes on its hind foot.
Subspecies of rat snake
17Phylogeny
- Phylogeny is evolutionary history
- Much of Linnaeus work in classification is
relevant even in the context of phylogeny because
morphological features are largely influenced by
genes and are clues of common ancestry.
1818-2 Modern Phylogenetic Taxonomy
19Systematics
- The study of molecular biology created a wealth
of information on organisms molecular nature and
changed the nature of taxonomy. - Taxonomists organize the tremendous diversity of
living things in the context of evolution.
20Systematic Taxonomy
- Systematic Taxonomists use several lines of
evidence to construct a phylogenetic tree. - Modern taxonomic placement involves
- Morphology
- Chromosomal characteristics
- Nucleotide and amino acid sequences (chromosomes)
- Embryological development
- Information from the fossil record.
21Phylogenetic tree
- Family tree that shows the evolutionary
relationships thought to exist among groups of
organisms. - Represents a hypothesis and is based on several
lines of evidence. - Subject to change as new information arises.
- Example Figure 18-3 p343
22Phylogenetic Tree
23Interpreting a Phylogenetic Tree
- Organism at base of tree is common ancestor to
all the others in the tree. - Branch points indicate the evolution of some
characteristic that splits a group into two
groups. - Groups shown at tips of branches include
organisms that have evolved most recently.
24The Fossil Record
- Provides clues to evolutionary relationships
- Some organisms such as some ocean invertebrates
have fairly complete fossil records. Others are
incomplete. - May provide framework for phylogenetic tree which
can then be confirmed with other lines of
evidence.
25Fossil Record
26Fossil record (horse, whale)
27Morphology
- Homologous features
- Show decent from a common ancestor.
- Common basic structure. Example bird wings and
bat wings. - The greater the number of homologous features two
organisms share, the more closely related they
are thought to be.
28Homologous Features
29Homologous Features
30- Analogous features
- Evolved independently.
- Differ in structure. Example flys wings and
bats wings.
31Analogous Features
32Embryological Patterns of Development
- Early patterns of embryological development
provide evidence of phylogenetic relationships. - Provide means of testing hypothesis about
relationships that have been developed from other
lines of evidence. - Blastophore formation In echinoderms and
chordates, indentation forms the posterior end of
the digestive system, in other animals it forms
the anterior end. Figure 18-4, p 344
33Embryonic Development
34Chromosomes and Macromolecules
- Taxonomists use comparisons of macromolecules
such as DNA, RNA and proteins as a kind of
molecular clock. - Scientists compare amino acid sequences for
homologous protein molecules of different
species. - The number of amino acid differences is a clue to
how long ago two species diverged from a shared
evolutionary ancestor. - Not perfect because it assumes that all changes
in amino acid sequencing are random and not
affected by natural selection. Additionally amino
acids can change at different rates in different
organisms.
35Chromosomes and Macromolecules - continued
- Molecular clock model is used together with other
data to estimate degrees of relatedness. - Scientists also compare karyotypes or patterns of
chromosomes of two related species. - Regions of chromosomes that have the same pattern
of banding are clues to the degree of relatedness.
36DNA comparisons (Artic bluegrass)
37DNA banding patterns
38This cladogram is based on similar amino acid
sequences in a specific protein produced by these
plants. The initials M,G, and so on indicate
different amino acids. The yellow squares
indicate differences within the
otherwise-identical sequences.
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40This phylogenetic diagram is based on analyses of
the DNA of many kinds of mammals. These analyses
do not support a systematic grouping of pangolins
with either African aardvarks or South American
anteaters. Instead, pangolins seem to be most
closely related to carnivores, such as bears and
dogs. Biologists sometimes revise their
classifications in light of such new evidence.
41Cladistics
- Relatively new system of phylogenetic
classification. - Uses certain features of organisms called shared
derived characteristics to establish evolutionary
relationships. - Derived character feature that apparently
evolved only within the group under
consideration. Example feathers in birds are
inherited from a common ancestor.
42Cladograms
- Ancestral diagrams made by means of cladistic
analysis. Figure 18-6 p346 - To interpret a cladogram
- Begin at the bottom and move up the axis that
shows branch points. - Groups and derived characteristics appeared in
the order shown. - Example all groups branching above hair have
hair. Those below do not.
43Cladogram
44This cladogram groups several major kinds of
plants according to their shared, derived
characters. The most common character (vascular
tissue) is shared by all groups. The least common
character (flowers) separates flowering plants
from all other plants.
45Conflict between tradition taxonomy and newer
cladistics
- Traditional Snakes, lizards, crocodiles are all
reptiles. Birds in class by themselves. - Newer Dinosaurs are more closely related to
birds and crocs than to snakes and lizards.
Reptiles did not spring from one common ancestor
but are a composite of several branches that have
occurred during evolution of vertebrates.
46Traditional systematists placed crocodiles in the
class Reptilia, but placed birds in the class
Aves. In contrast, cladistic taxonomists have
grouped crocodiles and birds together in a clade
named Archosauria. Notice that clades do not have
category names such as class or phylum.
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4818-3 Two Modern Systems of Classification
- Six Kingdom System
- Three Domain System
49Six Kingdom System
- Kingdom Archaebacteria
- Kingdom Eubacteria
- Kingdom Protists
- Kingdom Fungi
- Kingdom Plantae
- Kingdom Animalia
50Six Kingdoms
51Kingdom Archaebacteria
52Kingdom Archaebacteria
- Unicellular
- Prokaryotes with distinctive cell membranes
- Biochemical and genetic properties that differ
from all other kinds of life. - Some autotrophic produce food by chemosynthesis
and methane waste.
53- Many live in harsh environments sulfurous hot
springs, salty lakes, anaerobic environments,
intestines of animals - archae ancient
- May be directly descended from and very similar
to first organisms on Earth
54Kingdom Eubacteria
55Kingdom Eubacteria
- eu true
- Unicellular, prokaryotes
- Bacteria that affect your life tooth decay, turn
milk to yogurt, food poisoning, illness - Most use oxygen, but a few cannot live in O2
- Both Eubacteria and archaebacteria make up the
greatest number of living things on Earth.
56- Both Eubacteria and archaebacteria reproduce by
binary fission but do have methods of genetic
recombination to allow evolution to occur. - Short generation times (as little as 30 minutes)
allow rapid evolutionary response to
environmental change. Example antibiotic
resistant bacterial infection.
57Kingdom Protista
58Kingdom Protista
- Eukaryotic (membrane-bound true nucleus, linear
chromosomes, membrane bound organelles) - Mostly single-celled organisms, but some
multicellular but lack specialized tissues - Many species distantly related. Broad kingdom
contains all eukaryotes that are not plants,
animals, or fungi. 50,000 species. - Sexual cycles of many are unknown but thought to
have some process of genetic recombination.
59Kingdom Fungi
60Kingdom Fungi
- Heterotrophic
- Unicellular and multicellular
- Eukaryotic
- Absorb nutrients rather than ingesting them the
way some protists such as amoebas do. - Sexual cycles not known for many fungi. It is
likely that all species have some way of
promoting genetic recombination. - 100,000 species mushrooms, puffballs, rusts,
smuts, mildews, and molds.
61Kingdom Plantae
62Kingdom Plantae
- Multicellular plants
- All except for a few parasitic forms are
autotrophic and use photosynthesis as a source of
energy - Eukaryotic
- Most live on land
- Most have a sexual cycle based on meiosis
- 350,000 species identified including mosses,
ferns, conifers, flowering plants.
63Kingdom Animalia
64Kingdom Animalia
- Eukaryotic
- Multicellular
- Heterotrophs
- Most have symmetrical body organization and move
about their environment - Standard sexual cycle that employs meiosis for
the recombination of genes.
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66Three Domain System
- The young science of molecular biology has led to
an alternative to the 6 kingdom system - Carl Woese (1928- ) of University of Illinois.
Comparing sequences of ribosomal RNA in many
organisms. Estimated how long ago pairs of
organisms shared a common ancestor. - Phylogenetic tree drawn from this data shows that
living things seem to fall naturally into 3 broad
groups or domains. Figure 18-11 p350
67This phylogenetic diagram represents hypotheses
of the evolutionary relationships between the
major recognized groups of organisms. Notice the
alignment of the three domain names (Bacteria,
Archaea, and Eukarya) with three major branches
of the tree of life.
68The six-kingdom system of classification can be
aligned with the newer system of three domains.
However, biologists have proposed adding,
subdividing, or replacing some kingdoms.
Biologists have also proposed other levels of
taxa.
69The Three Domains
- Bacteria (Eubacteria)
- Archaea (Archaebacteria)
- Eukarya (Eukaryotes) includes Protista, Fungi,
Plantae, Animalia
70Three Domains
71Three Domains
72Conclusions from the Three Domain System
- All eukaryotes have true nuclei with linear
chromosomes and membrane-bound organelles. - The most variation in Eukarya is among protists.
- When considered from the perspective of the
complete diversity of life on Earth, the fungi,
plants, and animals are quite similar to each
other.
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