Title: Classification
1Chapter 18
2Chapter 18 Mystery
- Page 509
- GRIN AND BEAR IT
- Hypothesis Are polar bears and brown bears
separate species?
3Section 18.1Finding Order in Diversity
- Objectives
- What are the goals of binomal nomenclature and
systematics? - How did Linnaeus group species into larger taxa?
- Define
- Binomial nomenclature
- Genus
- Systematics
- Taxon
- Family
- Order
- Class
- Phylum
- Kingdom
4I. Assigning Scientific Names
Groundhog woodchuck
- To understand diversity must describe and name
each species - Each scientific name must refer to one and only
one species - Everyone must use the same name for that species
- Common names are confusing (mean different things
in different countries)
Burro Donkey
Gnus Wildbeast Bearded Antelope
Puma Cougar Mountain lion panther
5- 18th century
- Assigned greek/latin names
- Describe species in great detail
- Names can be long? still confusing
- Difficult to standardize b/c different scientists
focused on different characteristics - Differences can be used to ID species using
dichotomous key
6A. Binomial Nomenclature
- 1730s swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus
developed 2-word naming system - In binomial nomenclature, each species is
assigned a 2-part scientific name. - Written in italic
- First word begins w/ capital letter genus to
which org belongs - Genus group of similar species
- Second word is lowercased unique to each
species - Species group of individuals capable of
interbreeding and producing fertile offspring - Often description of important trait or habitat
7B. Classifying Species into Larger Groups
- Scientists try to classify (organize) living and
fossil species into larger groups that have
biological meaning - Systematics science of naming and grouping
organisms - The goal of systematics is to organize living
things into groups that have biological meaning - Groups taxa (singular taxon)
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9Mystery Clue
- Page 512
- Polar bears and brown bears interbreed and
produce fertile hybrids in zoos, but they very
rarely interbreed in nature. - What do you think this means about the
relationship between them?
10II. The Linnaean Classification System
- Linnaeus developed classification system that
organized species into taxa that formed a
hierarchy (set of ordered ranks) - Original system 4 levels
- Over time, Linnaeuss original classification
system expanded to include seven hierarchial
taxa species, genus, family, order, class,
phylum, and kingdom - 2 smallest categories genus species
- Grouped species according to anatomical
similarities and differences ? placed into larger
groups - Example Camelus bactrianus (Camel)
- Camelus genus name
- bactrianus species name
- Camelus dromedarius (different species in same
genus ? Camel with 1 hump)
111. Family
- Group larger than genus
- Multiple genuses can be classified in the same
family - Example Lama glama South American llama
- Resembles Bactrian camels and dromedaries
- But more similar to other South American species
than it is to European and Asian camels - So different genus Lama
- Several genera that share many similarities
grouped into larger group (family) - Example Camelidae
122. Order
- Closely related families grouped into next larger
rank Order - Example Camels and llamas (family Camelidae) ?
grouped with several other animal families - deer family Cervidae
- cattle family Bovidae
- order Artiodactyla (hoofed animlas with even
number of toes)
133. Class
- Similar orders grouped into next larger rank ?
class - Example order Artiodactyla placed in class
Mammalia - Includes all animals that are warmblooded, have
body hair, and produce milk for their young
144. Phylum
- Classes are grouped into a phylum
- Includes orgs that are different but share impt
characteristics - Example class Mammalia grouped w/ Birds (class
Aves), reptiles (class Reptilia), amphibians
(class Amphibia), and all classes of fish into
phylum Chrodata - All share impt body-plan features (nerve cord
along back)
155. Kingdom
- Largest and most inclusive taxonomic category
- All multicellular animals are placed in kingdom
Animalia
16A. Problems with Traditional Classification
- Members of a species determine which orgs belong
to that species by deciding w/ whom they mate and
produce offspring - Researchers define Linnaean ranks above the level
of species b/c different groups have been defined
in different ways at different times - How to determine which similarities and
differences are most important? - Linnaeus chose characteristics carefully (century
before Darwin) - Modern systematists apply Darwins ideas to
classification and try to look beyond simple
similarities and differences and look to
evolutionary relationships - Today try to assign species to a larger group in
ways that reflect how closely members of those
groups are related to each other
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18Section 18.2Modern Evolutionary Classification
- Objectives
- What is the goal of evolutionary classification?
- What is a cladogram?
- How are DNA sequences used in classification?
- Define
- Phylogeny
- Clade
- Monophyletic groups
- Cladogram
- Derived character
19I. Evolutionary Classification
- Phylogeny the evolutionary history of lineages
- The goal of phylogenic systematics, or
evolutionary classification, is to group species
into larger categories that reflect lines of
evolutionary descent, rather than overall
similarities and differences
20A. Common Ancestors
- Phylogenic systematics places orgs into higher
taxa whose members are more closely related to
one another than they are to members of any other
group - The larger a taxon is, the farther back in time
all of its members shared a common ancestor
21B. Clades
- Clade group of species that includes a single
common ancestor and all descendants of that
ancestor (living and extinct) - Clade must by monophyletic group includes
single common ancestor and all of its descendants
- Some groups defined before advent of evolutionary
classification monophyletic - Some groups paraphyletic the group includes
common ancestor but excludes one or more groups
of descendants
22II. Cladograms
- Cladistic analysis compares carefully selected
traits to determine order in which groups of
organisms branched off from common ancestor - Cladogram links groups of organisms together by
showing how evolutionary lines (lineages)
branched off from common ancestor
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24A. Building Cladograms
- Speciation event one ancestral species splits
into 2 new species basis of each branch point
(node) - Node represents last point at which the 2 new
lineages shared a common ancestor - Node splits a lineage into 2 separate lines of
evolutionary ancestry - Bottom (root) represents common ancestor shared
by all orgs in cladogram - Branching patterns indicate degrees of
relatedness among orgs
25B. Derived Characters
- Cladistic analysis focuses on certain kinds of
characters (derived characters) when assigning
orgs to clades - Derived character trait that arose in most
recent common ancestor of a particular lineage
and was passed along to its descendants - Whether or not a character is derived depends on
the level at which youre grouping orgs - Example several traits shared by coyotes and
lions (clade Carnivora) (clade Tetrapoda-4 legs)
(clade Mammalia-hair)
26C. Losing Traits
- 4 limbs derived character of clade Tetrapoda
- Snakes (no limbs) but ancestors of snakes had 4
limbs - Trait for limbs was lost
- Distantly related groups of orgs can sometimes
lose the same character ? systematists cautious
about using absence of a trait as a character - Whales do no have 4 limbs either, but snakes more
closely related to other reptiles than they are
to whales
27D. Interpreting Cladograms
- Lowest node represents last common ancestor of
all 4-limbed animals (clade Tetrapoda) - Forks show order in which various groups branched
off from tetrapod lineage over course of
evolution - Position of characters reflect order in which
those characteristics arose in lineage - Derived characters that occur lower on
cladogram than the branch point for a clade are
not derived for that particular clade
28E. Clades and Traditional Taxonomic Groups
- True clad must be monophyletic contains
ancestral species and all of its descendants
(cant leave any out) - Also cannot include any species not descendants
of original ancestor - Many traditional taxonomic groups do form valid
clades - class Mammalia corresponds to clade Mammalia ?
all vertebrates w/ hair and other impt chars - Some traditional groups do not form valid clades
- Todays reptiles all descended from common
ancestor - Birds also descended from same ancestor (not in
class Reptilia) - Reptilia w/o birds is not a clade
- Aves bird clade
- Dinosaura Reptilia clades reptiles birds
- Evolutionary biologists look for links b/w groups
how each is related to others - Bird also dinosaur, reptile, tetrapod, chordate
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30III. DNA in Classification
- Cladistic analysis based largely on physical
chars skeletons teeth - Goal of systematics understrand evolutionary
relationships of all life on earth - Bacteria, plants, snails, apes
- No physical similarities, so how can they be
related??
31A. Genes as Derived Characters
- All orgs carry genetic info in DNA passed from
earlier generations - Orgs share number of genes and show impt
homologies used to determine evolutionary
relationship - Example eukaryotic cells have mitochondria all
mitochondria have their own genes - All genes mutate over time ? shared genes contain
differences that can be treated as derived
characters in cladistic analysis - The more derived genetic characters 2 species
share, the more recently they shared a common
ancestor and the more closely they are related in
evolutionary terms
32B. New Techniques Suggest New Trees
- Use of DNA characters helped make evolutionary
trees more accurate - Example African vulture vs. American vulture
look alike and traditionally classified as
falcons - American vulture urinates on legs when
overheated ? similar behavior to stork not
African vulture - Analysis of DNA American vulture more similar
to storks than African vultures - Suggests American vultures and storks more
recent common ancestor than American and African
vultures - Molecular analysis powerful tool routinely used
by taxonomists to supplement data from anatomy - Example Giant panda red panda
- Share anatomical similarities w/ bears and
raccoons - Peculiar wrist bones that work like a human thumb
- DNA analysis giant panda shares more recent
common ancestor w/ bears than raccoons - DNA places red pandas outside bear clade in
different clade that includes raccoons, seals,
weasels
33Mystery Clue
- Page 522
- DNA comparisons show that some populations of
brown bears are more closely related to polar
bears than they are to other brown bears. - What do you think this means for the
classification of polar bears?
34Section 18.3Building the Tree of Life
- Objectives
- What are the six kingdoms of life as they are now
identified? - What does the tree of life show?
- Define
- Domain
- Bacteria
- Archea
- Eukarya
35I. Changing Ideas About Kingdoms
- Linnaeus time only differences among living
things were fundamental chars that separated
animals from plants - Animals orgs that moved from place to place and
used food for energy - Plants green orgs that generally did not move
and got energy from sun - Problem Linnaeuss 2 kingdoms did not reflect
full diversity of life so classification system
changed dramatically and still changing
36A. Five Kingdoms
- Single celled microorganisms significantly
different from plants and animals - At first ? all placed in one kingdom (Protista)
- Then ? yeasts, molds, mushrooms (Fungi)
- Later ? bacteria (no nuclei, mitochondria,
chloroplasts prokaryotes (Monera) - Single-celled eukaryotic orgs remained in
Protista - 5 Kingdoms Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae,
Animalia
37B. Six Kingdoms
- 1990s researchers learned a great deal about
genetics and biochemistry of bacteria - Orgs in Monera 2 genetically and biochemically
different groups (Eubacteria Archaebacteria) - The six-kingdom system of classification includes
the kingdoms Eubacteria, Archaebacteria,
Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia
38C. Three Domains
- Genomic analysis revealed that 2 main prokaryotic
groups are ever more different from each other
and from eukaryotes than previously thought ? new
taxonomic category (domain) - Domain larger, more inclusive category than
kingdom - 3 domains Bacteria (kingdom Eubacteria),
Archaea (kingdom Archaebacteria), Eukarya
(kingdoms Fungi, Planta, Animalia, Protista) - Protista paraphyletic group not a true
clade - no way to put all unicellular eukaryotes into
clade that contains single common ancestor, all
of its descendants, and only those descendants
39II. The Tree of All Life
- Goal present all life on single evolutionary
tree - Relationships studied ? grouping changes names
of groups change - Cladograms visual presentations of hypotheses
about relationships (not hard and fast facts) - The tree of life shoes current hypotheses
regarding evolutionary relationships among the
taxa within the three domains of life
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41A. Domain Bacteria
- Unicellular
- Prokaryotic
- Cells have thick, rigid walls that surround cell
membrane - Cell walls contain peptidoglycan
- Some photosynthesize and others dont
- Some need oxygen to survive and others are killed
by oxygen - Corresponds to kingdom Eubacteria
42B. Domain Archaea
- Unicellular
- Prokaryotic
- Live in some of most extreme environments
(volcanic hot springs, brine pools, black organic
mud) - Many can survive only in absence of oxygen
- Cell walls lack peptidoglycan
- Cell membranes contain unusual lipids that are
not found in any other orgs - Corresponds to kingdom Archaebacteria
43C. Domain Eukarya
- Consists of all orgs that have nucleus
- 4 major groups Protista, Fungi, Plantae,
Animalia
44The Protists Unicellular Eukaryotes
- Paraphyletic group
- Current cladistic analysis divides into at least
5 clades - Each group of eukaryotes formerly known as
protists is separate each shares closest
common ancestor with other groups rather than
with each other. - Most unicellular
- 1 group brown algae multicellular
- Some photosynthetic others heterotrophic
- Some display characters that most closely
resemble those of plants, fungi, or animals
452. Fungi
- Heterotrophs
- Cell walls containing chitin
- Feed on dead or decaying organic material
- Secrete digestive enzymes into food ? breaks down
into smaller molecules ? absorb small molecules
into bodies - Some multicellular (mushrooms)
- Some unicellular (yeasts)
463. Plantae
- Autotrophs
- Cell walls contain cellulose
- Conduct photosynthesis using chlorophyll
- Sister group to red algae (protists)
- Includes green algae, mosses, ferns, cone-bearing
plants flowering plants
474. Animalia
- Multicellular
- Heterotrophic
- No cell walls
- Most can move about (some for only part of life
cycle) - Incredible diversity
- Many species of animals exist in nearly every
part of planet
48Solve the Chapter Mystery
- Page 533
- List the evidence that supports classifying polar
bears and brown bears into two different species.
Then list the evidence that indicates that polar
bears and brown bears belong to the same species - What evidence indicates that different
populations of brown bears belong to different
clades? - Do you think that the classic definition of
species a group of similar organisms that can
breed and produce fertile offspring is still
adequate? Why or why not?