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Taxonomy and Classification. Species 13 billion known species of organisms – Only 5% of all organisms that ever lived – New species are still being found.

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Presentation on theme: "Taxonomy and Classification. Species 13 billion known species of organisms – Only 5% of all organisms that ever lived – New species are still being found."— Presentation transcript:

1 Taxonomy and Classification

2 Species 13 billion known species of organisms – Only 5% of all organisms that ever lived – New species are still being found and identified

3 Classification Vs. Taxonomy Classification = grouping organisms based on similarities Taxonomy = branch of biology that groups and names organisms based on characteristics What are Taxonomists?

4 Classification Accurately and uniformly names organisms – Ex. starfish (Asteroidea) and jellyfish (Medusozoa) are not actually fish Use same language for all names (Latin and Greek)

5 Confusion of common names in different languages Latin name is the same by all taxonomists

6 How do we classify organisms? DNA/protein analysis Embryology = study of organism’s early stages of life Anatomy = body parts and morphology (form) Phylogeny = evolutionary history of an organism

7 History! Aristotle (384-322) = first Taxonomist Classification by type and definition of an organism – Grouped by similarities – Divided into 2 groups: Plants and Animals Subdivided by habitat

8 What is the problem with this classification system?

9 History! John Ray (1685) = botanist – First to use Latin for naming plants – First to use the word “species” Names were long telling descriptions of everything about the plant

10 History! Carolus Linnaeus (1707 - 1778) = Father of Taxonomy – Classified organisms by their structure Developed a two-named system still used today! – Binomial Nomenclature (Genus and Species)

11 Standardized Naming Ex. Homo sapiens In Latin (some Greek) 1 st word = genus (capitalized) 2 nd word = species (lower case) – Both words are italicized American Robin

12 Classification Groups Taxon = category into which related organisms are placed Hierarchy of taxa from broad to specific – Domain = group of similar kingdoms – Kingdom = group of similar phyla – Phylum = group of similar classes – Class = group of similar orders – Order = group of similar families – Family = group of similar genera – Genus = group of similar species – Species = group of organism that can interbreed and produce fertile offspring

13 Classification 3 Domains – Bacteria – Archaea – Eukarya 4 Kingdoms – Protista – Fungi – Plantae – Animalia Which is Which? Ursus maritimus Ursus americanus Bufo americanus

14 Dumb King Phillip Cried Out For Goodness Sake!

15 Cladogram/Phylogenetic Tree Diagram showing organism’s evolutionary history C D E F A B Common Ancestor Which 2 organisms are most closely related? A&B or A&C A&C or C&D

16

17 Dichotomous Key Used to identify organisms Key that contains pairs of contrasting descriptions Read both characteristics – Either go to another set of characteristics or identify the organism

18 Example!!!

19 A B


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