Title: 1.1 Biodiversity
11.1 Biodiversity
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3Biodiversity
There are 3 levels of diversity
4Genetic diversity
- The sum of alleles present in a particular
species represents their genetic diversity - Genetic diversity allows populations to adapt to
changing environmental conditions - This makes the species as a whole more likely to
survive and/or evolve over time
5Genetic diversity
- Some modern practices, such as growing
monocultures, put species success at risk because
it decreases genetic diversity - This practice makes a species more susceptible to
disease and pests - Scientists often look for genes in wild
populations of the same species to boost immunity
or resistance and increase genetic diversity in
genetically uniform crops
6Species Diversity
- The variety and relative abundance (biomass) of
species in a given area - Generally ecosystems with lots of species
diversity are more productive and have a higher
tolerance for stress and changes than those with
lower diversity
7Ecosystem Diversity
- A wide range of habitats, a wide variety of
organisms and the relationships that connect them
determine how successful an ecosystem will be - Changes to one part of an ecosystem can vary from
some effect to a profound effect on the health
and sustainability of the system as a whole (e.g.
keystone species)
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9Valuing Biodiversity
- Biodiversity provides ecosystem services that
benefits all organisms including humans - Medicines, agriculture, decomposition of toxic
substances etc. benefit humans - Pollinator services for plants
- Nutrients cycle through the different spheres
- Modification and maintenance of the enviroment
10Honeybee crisis
- Why are honeybees important?
- Before humans imported the European honeybee to
North America (1800s) there were over 4000
different pollinators. Now there are very few. - What happened?
- Consider the three levels of diversity in your
answer.
111.2 The Science of Classification
12Renaissance
- Era of rebirth, exploration from Europe begins
- Interest shifted from the Divine to the human
form - Interest in human physiology and function,
disease - Era of experimentation, observation and analysis
begins
13William Harvey
- 1578-1658
- Discovered the circulation of the blood
- Part of the trend to looking for natural causes
and cures for diseases
14- The beginning of modern medical practice
- Doctors
- replaced village wise women so they needed to
make medicines - Required a reliable way of identifying medically
important plants - Beginning of the study of Botany
15Herbals
- Related species of plants do not look the same in
all habitats - Within the same related group some can be
beneficial, others poisonous - Invention of the printing press allowed mass
publication of accurate diagrams and descriptions
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17Modern Taxonomy
- Factors that contributed to modern taxonomy
- Global European exploration brought many new
species to Europe - No system for naming new or existing organisms
was in place - The same plant or animal could have different
names even in the same language
18Linneaus (1707-1778)
- Born Carl von Linné (Swedish)
- Father of modern taxonomy
- Greatly influenced by Aristotles concepts of
fixed genus and species - Major work Systema Naturae
19Systema Naturae
- Hierarchical levels beginning with Kingdom
(Plantae and Animalae) - Each kingdom divided into Classes, each Class
into Orders, Genera, and Species - Not classes in the modern sense created by God
- Binomial nomenclature
- Each organism has a unique genus and species
20Systema Naturae
- Plants were classified according their method of
reproduction - A brilliant guess!
- Used Latin (and Greek) so that the method was
international
21Systema Naturae
- Limitations
- Only physical features (morphology) could be
used for classification - Function or behaviour could not be used for
classification purposes
22Modern Taxonomy
- Linneaus system is still the basis for modern
taxonomy - Added Phylum between Kingdom and Class, and
Family between Order and Genus - Still use Latin although many new species use
words with other language roots
23Modern Taxonomy
- Genus is always capitalized, species in lower
case - Genus and species are written in italics (print)
or underlined (handwritten) - When used for the second time in a document the
genus name is often abbreviated to the first
letter - E.g. Homo sapiens becomes H. sapiens
24Two Kingdoms
25Three Kingdoms
26Five Kingdoms
27Six Kingdoms 3 Domains
Eukaryotic cells
Prokaryotic cells
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29Domains
- Domains are the broadest taxon in use
- There are currently three domains
- Archaea
- The oldest forms of life, prokaryotic, many were
anaerobic and contain extremophiles - Bacteria
- Also prokaryotic
- Eukarya
- All eukaryotic organisms
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33Modern taxonomy
- Linneaus grouped species according to morphology
appearance - Now scientists have access to DNA analysis and
phylogeny to help with classification - Phylogenetic trees are useful in showing
relationships over time and divergence from a
common ancestor
34Cladistics
- A particular method of hypothesizing
relationships among organisms. Like other
methods, it has its own set of assumptions,
procedures, and limitations. - The best method available for phylogenetic
analysis, it provides an explicit and testable
hypothesis of organism relationships.
35Cladistics
- There are three basic assumptions in cladistics
- 1. Any group of organisms are related by descent
from a common ancestor. - 2. There is a bifurcating pattern of
cladogenesis. - 3. Change in characteristics occurs in lineages
over time.
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37Phylogenetic tree(s)
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39Each node represents a point where a major
divergence in characteristicsoccurred
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41Tree of Life
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43Levels of Classification
- Kingdom
- Phylum
- Class
- Order
- Family
- Genus
- Species
44Mnemonic
- King
- Phyllips
- Class
- Orders
- Family
- Geni to
- Speak
45Binomial Nomenclature
- Or a two part naming system
- Commonly referred to as the scientific name of
an organism - Each species is unique (review definition!)
- Related species are grouped together into the
same genus - Related genera (plural of genus) form families
46Binomial Nomenclature
- Related families are grouped into orders
- Orders are grouped into classes
- Different classes form a phylum
- Different phyla (plural of phylum) form a kingdom
47Panthera pardus
The genus and species names are always written in
italics (or underlined if hand written) and the
genus name is capitalized.
The first time the genus name is used it is
written out in full, afterwards it can be
abbreviated to a capital letter, for example P.
pardus or P. leo.
48pardus
Panthera
Felidae
Carnivora
Mammalia
Chordata
Animalia
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50Binomial Nomenclature
- The term taxon (plural is taxa) refers to a level
in the hierarchy - The Insecta are such a large group that
superfamillies and suborders are used as well
51Dichotomous Keys
- Method used to create identification keys based
on pairs of characteristics - Only morphology (observable characteristics) can
be used no behviour or function can be used - Structured format to the keys
- Two types spider and standard formats
52Spider Key
2a
yes
1a
3a
Large claws present
yes
yes
no
Has five or more distinct appendages
Shaped like a star
2b
no
no
3b
1b
53Standard format key
- 1a. Has five or more distinct appendages 2
- 2a. Has large claws . lobster
- 2b. Does not have claws . 3
- 3a. Shaped like a star .. starfish
- 3b. Not star shaped . octopus
- 1b. Has less than five distinct appendages
whale
54Notes on Keys
- Use an a and b for each level
- Start at the margin and indent for each new level
- Keep levels even no matter what the number is, it
is the number of criteria that matter - Split numbers as needed so that each
identification can follow through without
changing branches - Use dots to fill the space to the right margin
where either a number or item appear
55Standard format key
- 1a. Has five or more distinct appendages 2
- 1b. Has less than five distinct appendages..
whale - 2a. Has large claws .... lobster
- 2b. Does not have claws . 3
- 3a. Shaped like a star . starfish
- 3b. Not star shaped . octopus
56Notes to key
- Pairs of related criteria appear together
- Single space between each number
- Use dots to fill the space between the criteria
and the right margin where either a number or
item appear
57Dichotomous Key
58The prefix di means 2 so there are two
characteristics to consider in each choice or
step of the key. Each characteristic must be
chosen so that there is a yes or no answer.
There cannot be ambiguity or a possible 3rd
choice.
The answer will determine which step is next in
the process
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