Title: TAXONOMY
1TAXONOMY
- NAMING AND CLASSIFYING ORGANISMS
2Binomial Naming System
- Genus species
- Genus species
- G. species
- G. species
- Example Escherichia coli (E. coli)
- Devised by Linneaus - binomial nomenclature
3Classification
- Organisms used to be grouped into 5 major
kingdoms - 1. Prokaryotae (Monera)
- 2. Protista
- 3. Mycetae (Fungi)
- 4. Plantae
- 5. Animalia
4Classification Update
- Current texts are now using a 6 kingdom approach
- Kingdom Monera is subdivided into two kingdoms
- - Archaebacteria
- - Eubacteria
5Classification Systemdevised by Linnaeus
- Kingdoms subdivided into increasingly similar
hierarchy groups - -Phylum (phyla, plural) for animals and animal
like organisms OR - -Division for plant and plant like organisms
6Classification Systems
- Phyla and Divisions are subdivided into Classes
- Classes are subdivided into Orders
- Orders are subdivided into Families
- Families are subdivided into Genera (genus,
singular) - Genera are divided into species
7Classification System
- KingdomgtPhylum or Divisiongt ClassgtOrdergtFamilygtGen
usgt species - Keep putting clothes on for goodness sake!
8Classification of humans(Homo sapiens)
- Kingdom Animalia
- Phylum Chordata
- Class Mammalia
- Order Primates
- Family Hominidae
- Genus Homo
- species sapiens
9Classification Criteria
- Cell type (Prokaryotic or Eukaryotic)
- Cell number (unicellular or multicellular)
- Cell wall (present or absent)
- Nutritional Mode Autotrophic (photosynthetic) or
Heterotrophic (unable to make food)
10Classification of Kingdom Bacteria (Old Monera)
- prokaryotic
- unicellular organisms
- Bacteria (eubacteria)
- cyanobacteria (bluegreen algae)
- 3 Major shapes
- Bacillus or rod shape
- Coccus or spherical
- Spiral
11Classification of Bacteria (Old Monera)
- prokaryotic
- unicellular organisms
- Bacteria (eubacteria)
- cyanobacteria
12Kingdom Bacteria (Eubacteria)Bacteria growing on
Petri Dish
13Kingdom Prokaryotae3 Major Shapes of Bacteria
Spiral
Bacillus
Cocci
14Kingdom Archeabacteria
- Prokaryotic
- Unicellular
- Cell walls
- Can withstand extreme growth conditions
- Thermophiles
- Halophiles
- Methanogens
15Classification of Protista
- eukaryotic
- single cell organisms
- both plant like and animal like unicells
- both photosynthetic and heterotrophic
- protozoa
- algae
16SEMs of Fossil Diatoms
17Kingdom Protista AlgaeViewed with Light
microscope
Diatoms
Spiral
Dinoflagellates
18Kingdom Protista Protozoa
Two protozoa that cause human disease Trichomonas
vaginalis Giardia lamblia
19Trypanosoma protozoa in a blood smear (African
Sleeping Sickness)
20Classification of Mycetae (Fungi)
- Eukaryotic
- Usually multicellular
- Often filamentous
- Cell walls of chitin
- Heterotrophic
- absorb extracellular,
- predigested food
- mushrooms, yeast, molds
21Kingdom Mycetae (Fungi)
22Kingdom Mycetae (Fungi)
- Yeast cells
- Bread making
- Alcoholic beverages
Yeast Cells
23Classification of Plantae
- eukaryotic
- multicellular
- cell walls of cellulose
- photosynthetic
- green plants (grass, flowers, trees)
24Kingdom Plantae
25Classification of Animalia
- eukaryotic
- multicellular
- no cell walls
- heterotrophic
- humans, dogs, jellyfish, insects
26Kingdom Animalia
27TAXONOMIC KEY
- Used to identify an organism
- Usually a two choice system called a DICHOTOMOUS
KEY - User chooses between two contrasting alternatives
to arrive at the name of an organism