Taxonomy Linnaeus – Binomial Nomenclature Study of naming and classifying organisms
Phylogeny Classification based on evolutionary history Phylogenetic Trees
Cladistic Analysis Cladograms – based on order in time things branch (dichotomous branching)
Cladistic Analysis Homologies – similar due to evolution Analogies – similar due to environment Convergent Evolution
Cladistic Analysis Monophyletic – ancestor and all the descendents Paraphyletic – ancestor and some of the descendents Polyphyletic – multiple ancestors
Cladistic Analysis Primitive characteristic – ancestral (outgroup) Derived characteristic – unique to clade
Cladistics and Taxonomy Clade patterns are used to place species into a hierarchy
Parsimony Simplest answer is probably correct
Pitfalls Analogy vs. Homology
Reptilia???
Domains
Domain: Bacteria
Domain: Archaea Carl Woese – Prokaryotic cell but similar to Eukaryotes in DNA replication and Protein synthesis
Domain: Eukarya Protista – kingdom divided into many different kingdoms
“Kingdom” - Protista
Kingdom: Plantae
Charophytes
Division: Bryophyta
Division: Pterophyta
Gymnosperms
Angiosperms
Kingdom: Fungi
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Porifera No true Tissue Choanocytes – collar cells
Phylum: Cnidaria Radial Symmetry Nematocysts – Stinging cells
Phylum: Platyhelminthes Acoelomates Flatworms
Phylum: Nematoda Pseudocoelomates Roundworms
Phylum: Mollusca Protostomes Soft and unsegmented Radula
Phylum: Mollusca
Phylum: Annelida Protostomes Soft and segmented
Phylum: Arthropoda Protostomes Hard and Segmented Jointed feet
Phylum: Arthropoda
Phylum: Echinodermata Deuterostomes Water-vascular system Secondary Radial Symmetry
Phylum: Chordata Deuterostome Notochord Hollow, Dorsal Nerve Cord Post Anal Tail Pharyngeal Gill Slits
Subphyla: Urochordata and Cephalochordata
Subphyla: Vertebrata
Superclass: Agnatha
Class: Chondricthyes
Class: Osteichthyes
Class: Amphibia
Amniotic Egg
Class: Reptilia
Class: Aves
Class: Mammalia