Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJennifer McKinney Modified over 9 years ago
1
Classification of Living Things Please write down everything in THIS COLOR
2
Why do scientists classify? Biologists use classification to organize living things into groups so that the organisms are easier to study. Classification: the process of grouping things based on their similarities. Taxonomy: the scientific study of how living things are classified.
3
The classification system of Linnaeus 1750s Swedish scientist named Carolus Linnaeus created a naming system for organisms. Binomial nomenclature: the naming system for organisms in which each organism is given a two-part name—a genus name and a species name.
4
Genus and Species Genus: a classification grouping that consists of a number of similar, closely related species. The first part of an organism’s scientific name. Species: A group of similar organisms that can mate and produce fertile offspring. The second part of an organism’s scientific name.
5
For example…genus Pumas, ocelots, and housecats are all classified in the genus Felis. They all share characteristics such as sharp, retractable claws and behaviors such as hunting other animals.
6
…and species. The species name sets one species in a genus apart from another. The species name often describes a distinctive feature of an organism—where it lives or its color. –Puma: Felis concolor (same color) –Ocelot: Felis pardalis (spotted) –House cat: Felis domesticus (of the house)
7
Specifics These words are in Latin. –Latin was the language that scientists communicated in during that time. The entire scientific name is written in italics. The genus is capitalized and the species begins with a small letter.
8
7 levels of classification KINGDOM PHYLUM CLASS ORDER FAMILY GENUS SPECIES If you can, think of a way to remember these—King Phillip Comes Over For Good Spaghetti
9
Here is the classification of what we know as a leopard
10
Kingdoms A kingdom is the broadest level of organization. There are 6 main kingdoms: –Animals –Plants –Fungi –Protists –Eubacteria –Archaebacteria
11
Phyla Within a kingdom there are phyla. –One of the most important phyla classifications is in the animal kingdom. –Animals with backbones are placed in the phylum Chordata. –Animals without backbones are placed in many different phyla
12
Scientists have divided the Animal Kingdom into two main groups: vertebrates (animals with a backbone) invertebrates (animals without a backbone) and
13
Taxonomic or dichotomous key Taxonomic key: a series of paired statements that describe the physical characteristics of different organisms. It is also called a dichotomous key (“di” meaning “two”) because at each level on the key there are two choices to identify the organism.
14
Try using a dichotomous key! http://students.ed.qut.edu.au/n236 4379/MDB377/DichotomousKey.ht mlhttp://students.ed.qut.edu.au/n236 4379/MDB377/DichotomousKey.ht ml Use this link to work together as a class to classify different animals.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.