Title: Granny wants to buy you a car
1Granny wants to buy you a car
- What kind of vehicle do you want?
- Classify the type of automobile you want
2Classification Goes from General to Specific
- Domain Automobile
- Kingdom Car
- Phylum Ford
- Class Mustang
- Order 2011
- Family Convertible
- Genus Black
- Species two door
3If you dont classify specifically your granny
might get you
- Domain Automobile
- Kingdom Car
- Phylum Ford
- Class Pinto
- Order 1973
- Family Wagon
- Genus Green/Wood
- Species 3 door
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4Scientific Classification
- In addition to cars, what do we classify in
society? - How do we classify these things in society?
- How do we classify in science?
5Aristotle 384 322 BC
- Chain of being
- 2 Kingdoms
- 1st known
- attempts to classify life
-
62 Kingdoms of Aristotle
7Further Classification
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9Early Classification Aristotle 384-322 B.C.
- 2 Kingdoms Plants and Animals
- Plants Green, Non Mobile
- Animals Not Green, Mobile
10How would you classify this using the
Plant/Animal system?
Praying Mantis Green but.. Mobile
Aristotles Grouping of life not specific enough
11Carl Linnaeus 1707 - 1778
- Swedish botanist
- Started putting species in similar categories
(taxa) - Systema Naturae
12Linnaeus Systema Naturae
- Linnaeus changed Aristotle's system. He
- Did away with the plant/animal rules
- Based his system on specific, similar traits
(morphology) - Gave organisms taxa that described traits, and
called them gave scientific names (binomial
nomenclature) - Kingdom ? Species System
13Systema Naturae Taxa Linnaeus
- Each category is called a taxon (plural taxa)
- 1. Kingdom
- 2. Phylum
- 3. Class
- 4. Order
- 5. Family
- 6. Genus
- 7. Species
-
14Mnemonic Device To help remember categories and
order
- Kingdom - King
- Phylum - Phillip
- Class Came
- Order Over
- Family - For
- Genus - Great
- Species - Spaghetti
15Example Classification
- Lion
- 1. Kingdom Animalia (all Animals)
- 2. Phylum Chordata (All vertebrate animals)
- 3. Class Mammalia (All Mammals mammary
glands) - 4. Order Carnivora (Meat eaters)
- 5. Family Felidae (includes all Cats)
- 6. Genus Panthera (Includes all roaring
Cats) - 7. Species leo (Lions)
16Example of Systema Naturae
17Common name vs. Scientific name
- What is this?
- Common name(s)
- Mountain lion
- Cougar
- Panther
- Puma
- Scientific name
- Felis concolor
18Binomial Nomenclature
- In binomial nomenclature each species is assigned
a two part scientific name - Language Latin
- Written in italics Genus species
- In writing the name, cant italicize, so
underline - Homo sapien (Genus and species of Human)
- Panthera leo (Genus and species of Lion)
19Classification of a Rose
- A rose by any other name
- Kingdom Plantae
- Phylum Anthophyta
- Class Magnoliopsida
- Order Rosales
- Family Rosaceae
- Genus Rosa
- Species multiflora
20Why Classify?
- Names wont change
- Keeps living things universal
- Descriptions of living things cannot be mistaken
or lost in translation among scientists
21Why Classify?
- Useful ID tool for scientists in the field of
agriculture, forestry and medicine - Example
- A child eats berries from a poisonous plant
Poison control can identify the plant quickly,
giving the info. to physicians to treat quickly
22Human Taxonomy Do you know how YOU are
classified?
- KingdomAnimalia
- PhylumChordata
- ClassMammalia
- OrderPrimate
- FamilyHominidae
- GenusHomo
- Speciessapien
- What is our scientific name in binomial
nomenclature? - What does it mean?
237 Taxa of Linnaeus
- Kingdom
- Phylum
- Class
- Order
- Family
- Genus
- Species
- Animalia, Chordata, Mammalia, Carnivora, Canidae,
Canis, familiaris
24Match common names with scientific names.
- Column 1 Column 2
- ________1. Zebra a. Magnolia grandiflora
- ________2. Collared lizard b. Mus musculus
- ________3. Praying mantis c. Pinus
sylvestris - ________4. Indian elephant d. Cucumis
sativus - ________5. Map turtle e. Mantis religiosa
- ________6. Atlantic salmon f. Equus caballus
- ________7. Giant panda g. Sphagnum affine
- ________8. Purple finch h. Ulnus americana
- ________9. Scotch pine i. Elephas maximus
- _______10. Paper birch j. Ursus horribilis
- _______11. White clover k. Graptemys
geographica - _______12. Southern magnolia l. Betula
papyrifera - _______13. Red maple m. Carpodacus pupureus
- _______14. American elm n. Trifolium alba
- _______15. House mouse o. Salmo salar
- _______16. Sphagnum moss p. Camelus
bactrianus - _______17. Horse q. Equus zebra
- _______18. Grizzly bear r. Acer rubrum
25Timeline of Classification
- 1. 384 322 B.C. Aristotle
- 2 Kingdom Broad Classification
- 2. 1735 - Carl Linnaeus
- 2 Kingdom Multi-divisional Classification
- Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family Genus,
Species - 3. Evolutionary Classification (post-Darwin)
- Group by Evolutionary Descent
- 4. 5 Kingdom System 1950s
- 5. 6 Kingdom System 1990s
- 6. 3 Domain System 1990s
26Multi-Kingdom System
- 2 Kingdom System not efficient -- WHY?
- Microscope!!!
- Opened a new world of organisms
- Biochemical Testing
- Modern Classification System
- 3 Domain Superkingdom
- 6 Kingdom
27OLD VERSIONWhat are the 5 Kingdoms?
Monera (bacteria) has been split into 2 Kingdoms!
286 Kingdom System
Animalia Plantae Fungi Protista Eubacteria Archaea
bacteria
293 Domains
- Eubacteria Common Bacteria
- Archaea Bacteria ancient Bacteria
- Eukarya Includes everything else - Protist,
Fungi, Monera, Plants, and Animals
30Current Classification
- Modern Classification which taxon is new?
- 1. Domain most general taxa
- 2. Kingdom
- 3. Phylum
- 4. Class
- 5. Order
- 6. Family
- 7. Genus
- 8. Species
-
31Human Taxonomy Do you know how YOU are
classified?
- Domain Eukarya
- KingdomAnimalia
- PhylumChordata
- ClassMammalia
- OrderPrimate
- FamilyHominidae
- GenusHomo
- Speciessapien
326 Kingdoms
Domain Kingdom
Bacteria Eubacteria
Archaea Archaebacteria
Eukarya Protista
Eukarya Fungi
Eukarya Plantae
Eukarya Animalia
33Fan Diagrams
- How are fan diagrams different from cladograms?
34Three Domain System
- 1. Domain Bacteria
- Corresponds to Eubacteria Kingdom
- Unicellular Prokaryotic Organisms
- No Nucleus
- Ecologically Diverse live everywhere!
- Metabolically Diverse
- Cell Walls contain substance called Peptidoglycan
special protein and sugar - Trait used to distinguish between
- Bacteria and Archaea
- Target of many Antibiotics
35Three Domain System
- 2. Domain Archaea Ancient Bacteria
- Corresponds to Kingdom Archaeabacteria
- Unicellular, Prokaryotes
- Metabolically Diverse
- No nucleus
- Live in Extreme environments like those of early
Earth - Cell walls without Peptidoglycan
- A trait used to distinguish between Archaea and
Bacteria Domains
36Three Domain System
- 3. Eukarya
- Contains Kingdoms
- Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia
- Eukaryotic, single or multi-cellular Organisms
- Nucleus
- Most visible life
- Humans are in Domain Eukarya
37The 6 Kingdoms
- NOTE For now, we are going to just get an
OVERVIEW of each kingdom we will visit each one
in detail the rest of the semester
38For now we will only introduce the
- Important characteristics -
- Domain
- Cell type
- Prokaryotic or eukaryotic?
- Cell arrangement
- Unicellular, multicellular or both?
- Nutrition
- Autotrophic, heterotrophic, chemotropic or some
of each? - Cell wall
- If yes, whats it made of? (there are different
kinds) - Examples and facts
39Kingdoms 1
- Archaebacteria
- archae Greek "ANCIENT
- Modern archaebacteria MAY BE directly descended
from (and are very similar to) the first
organisms on Earth - Biochemical genetic properties differ from ALL
other kinds of life - UNICELLULAR PROKARYOTES
- No distinct nucleus with membrane around it
- Cell wall made of pseudopeptidoglycan
- Most are heterotrophic, a few are autotrophic,
and some are chemotrophic - Live in harsh environments
- Sulfurous hot springs, very salty lakes, and in
ANAEROBIC environments, such as the intestines of
mammals - 3 phyla
- Methanogens
- Halophiles
- Thermoacidophiles
40Kingdoms 2
- Eubacteria
- EU "TRUE
- UNICELLULAR PROKARYOTES
- No distinct nucleus with membrane around it
- Cell wall made from peptidoglycan
- Some are heterotrophic, some are autotrophic,
some are chemotrophic - Examples
- Most of the Bacteria (Germs) that affect your
life - Includes the disease-causing bacteria such as
tooth decay or food poisoning - E. coli, Salmonella, Streptococcus
41Kingdom 3
- Protista
- Eukaryotes
- Lacks complex organ systems
- Live in moist environments
- Cell wall variety some are polysaccharide,
some silica, some DONT have one - Mostly unicellular (some colonial
multicellular) - Heterotrophic Autotrophic
- 3 types plant-like, animal-like, fungus-like
- Examples AMOEBA, PARAMECIUM, EUGLENA, ALGAE
42Kingdom 4
- Fungi
- Eukaryotes
- Heterotrophs that do not move (sessile)
- Cell wall made from chitin
- Mostly multicellular
- A few are unicellular
- Examples MUSHROOMS MOLDS MILDEWS YEAST
(unicellular)
43Kingdom 5
- Plants
- Eukaryotes
- Multicellular
- Autotrophs
- Sessile
- Cell walls made of cellulose
- Have complex organ systems
- Examples MOSS, FERNS FLOWERING PLANTS, BUSHES,
TREES
44Kingdom 6
- Animals
- Eukaryotes
- Multicellular
- Heterotrophs
- NO CELL WALL
- MOSTLY Motile
- Have complex organ system
- Examples INSECTS, JELLYFISH, HYDRA, CRABS, FISH,
BIRDS, LIONS,TIGERS,BEARS (oh my !)
45What would the 6 kingdoms say?
- For YOUR kingdom, create a comic/cartoon
- Include a color picture of the organism in its
environment - Give your organism a dialog bubble where it can
speak traits you cant show in your drawing - Be creative! Make a lasting impression!
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47Three Domains of LifeP. 460-461
48Evolutionary Classification System - Phylogeny
- Based on
- 1. Comparative Morphology
- 2. Biochemistry
- 3. Derived Characteristics
- AND ALSO COSIDERED IS
- PHYLOGENY
- The evolutionary history of an organism
49Phylogeny
- Evolutionary relationships between Taxa
- Uses
- Fossil record comparative morphology
- Comparing Homologous DNA/RNA
- Mitochondrial DNA
- rRNA
- Molecular Clocks
- Makes Phylogenetic trees and cladograms
50Molecular Clock can Determine Relationships and
Derived Characters of Species
New mutations are added over evolutionary time
the more recent the organism, the more mutations
are seen
We Know how newer species are related to ancestor
orgs due to mutation patterns
51Phylogenetic Tree
52Which organisms are most related?
- Ubiquitin gene
- Dog
- Amino acid sequence
- Met-pro-iso-asp-val-phe
- Whale
- Amino acid sequence
- Met-pro-iso-asp-leu-phe
- Shark
- Amino acid sequence
- Met-val-iso-his-leu-arg
53Cladistics
- Clade evolutionary branch
- Shows relationships
- Organizes organisms in order of evolution
- Derived characteristics
- novel characters which define their grouping
54Cladistics
- A system of classification based on phylogeny
- Uses cladograms
- What does a cladogram tell you?
55Cladogram vs. Comparative (Traditional)
Morphology p.452
Derived Characters
lt-- Common Ancestor
? ?
Common Ancestor ?
Common Ancestor ?
56Evolutionary classification fixes traditional
classification problems
57What is this organism? How do we use
classification as tool to find out?
58How to use Classification information?
Dichotomous Keys
- Dichotomous Key
- 2 branching
- Uses PAIRED STATEMENTS to classify
- Either or statements
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60try this one
61Answers
- A. Deerus magnus
- B. Deerus pestis
- C. Deerus octagis
- D. Deerus purplinis
- E. Deerus deafus
- F. Deerus humpis
62Dichotomous Key you try one
63Some are quite complex
64New Species
65Classification Problems
- Discovery of new organisms may warrant new
categories - EX a new family might be created
In the fall of 2006, a new type of crab with a
furry appearance, found near Easter Island in the
Pacific Ocean, was so unusual it warranted a
whole new family designation, Kiwaidae. It was
found at a depth of 2000ft, in area where the
Antarctic sea-shelf is melting
66Totally newThe Vampire Squid
- KingdomAnimaliaPhylumMolluscaClassCephalopoda
OrderVampyromorphidaFamilyVampyroteuthidaeGen
usVampyroteuthisSpeciesinfernalis - Scientific Name
- Vampyroteuthis infernalis
67Creepy Critters Lab
- What would be your Kingdoms? Phyla? Classes?
Orders? Families? Genera? Species? - What would have helped?
68Summary
- Classification of organism brings order to the
great diversity of life - Each organism is assigned a 2-part latin name
(genus species) recognized by all scientists - Taxonomy today classifies organism on the basis
of their evolutionary relationships phyolgeny,
cladistics
69Summary (contd)
- Organisms are classified in a series of taxa
- Each taxa represents a set of more specific
characteristics - 3 Domains of life contain
- There are 6 kingdoms
- Species is the most specific taxa
70No rest for the taxonomist!
- New environments ? Evolution ? Speciation ? new
species continually forming - Still finding new extant organisms.Deep ocean,
rainforest, etc