Title: Bell Work
1Bell Work
2Objective
- 0807.5.1 Use a simple classification key to
identify an unknown organism.
3Classification Activity
- At your lab table there are several pictures of
animals. Remove all pictures from the folder. - With your lab group, categorize these pictures
according to their characteristics. - Your team must make at least three groups (or
more). Lay the pictures in three separate groups
on your lab table. - Keep the name of each group a secret because when
we share our groups, we will allow the other
groups to guess how you categorized the pictures.
- Dont tell your category names when you show the
picture, wait until the other groups guess.
4- Classification means organizing living things
into groups based on their similarities.
5- Scientists classify living and extinct organisms
to make them easier to study.
6- Organisms are classified by shared
characteristics and their relationships between
one another.
7- The levels of classification go from very general
to very specific.
8-
- Domain Did
- Kingdom King
- Phylum Philip
- Class Come
- Order Over
- Family From
- Genus Great
- Species Spain
The 8 levels Pneumonic device
9- The science of classifying organisms is called
taxonomy.
10- Taxonomy was founded by Linnaeus in the 1700s.
- He classified things only by their shared
characteristics.
11- Modern taxonomists also look at evolutionary
relationships between animals.
12- A branching diagram can show the relationships
between organisms.
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14Group Activity using the Branching Diagram
1. Construct a Branching diagram 2. Use a frog, a
snake, a kangaroo, and a rabbit in your
diagram. 3. Think of one major change before the
frog appeared. 4. For the last 3 organisms,
think of a change that happened between one of
these and the other 2. Write all of these in
your diagram.
15rabbit
kangaroo
snake
Young develop fully inside mother
frog
Fur live birth
Lay eggs on dry land dry skin
Air breathing ability to live on land
16- Organisms that are more closely related are
closer together on the branching diagram.
17- When living things are classified, they get a
scientific name. - The scientific name is the same anywhere in the
world.
18- The 4 Rules to writing a Scientific Name
19- 1. Scientific names are usually Latin or Greek.
20- 2. The scientific name is always the genus and
species name together.
21- 3. The Genus is always written first and
capitalized. - The species is second and is always lower case.
22- 4. The scientific name is always italicized or
underlined. - Ex. Felis domesticus
23- Scientists can use a dichotomous key to identify
unknown organisms. - Pg. 52
24- Bacteria are prokaryotic, meaning they do not
have nuclei. - All other living things are eukaryotic and have
nuclei.
25Scientists use 3 Domains.
Prokaryotes
Eukaryotes
26Scientists use 6 kingdoms.
- Archaebacteria
- Eubacteria
- Protista
27- Domain Archaea
- Kingdom Archaebacteria - live in extreme
environments (very hot or cold) - They have been on the earth for about 3 billion
years.
28- Domain Bacteria
- Most bacteria are in Kingdom Eubacteria.
- They live in many places all over the earth and
even inside other organisms.
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32- Domain Eukarya
- Kingdom Protista -consists of unicellular
simple multicellular organisms.
33- Protista includes organisms that are not plants,
animals or fungi
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38- Domain Eukarya
- Kingdom Plantae - Plants are usually green make
food by photosynthesis - They are complex, multicellular organisms
39- Domain Eukarya
- Kingdom Fungi- absorb food from their
surroundings. - Fungi are usually multicellular (except yeast).
40- Domain Eukarya
- Kingdom Animalia
- Most move around and have nervous systems.
Animals are complex multicellular.
41Five Kingdom Classification
Monera Kingdom Protist Kingdom Fungi Kingdom Plant Kingdom Animal Kingdom
Major Traits Single-celled no nucleus Most are single-celled Some make own food some cannot make own food Most are many-celled cannot make own food Single-celled and many-celled make own food cannot move from place to place Many-celled cannot make own food can move from place to place
Examples Bacteria Paramecium amoeba euglena Mushroom mold, yeast Tree, small flowering plant, fern, algae Sponge, insect, clam, fish, bird, snake, human