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Published byBrent Chambers Modified over 9 years ago
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Kingdoms of Modern Life
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Kingdom Monera (“Monerans”) Smallest and simplest lifeforms Unicellular (one-celled) no nucleus Bacteria and cyanobacteria
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Bacteria Three basic shapes: round (cocci) rod (bacilli) spiral (spirilli)
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Kingdom Protista(“Protists”) Single-celled or multicellular more complex than organisms in Kingdom Monera nucleus protozoans (animal-like) algae (plant-like)
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Protozoans Kingdom Protista no cell wall or chlorophyll internal digestion no locomotion (some)
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Algae Cell walls Chlorophyll Photosynthetic Placed in groups according to color and structure
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Kingdom Fungi Multicellular; complex cell walls, no chlorophyll Threadlike fungi (bread mold) club fungi (mushrooms) sac fungi (yeast and mildew)
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Kingdom Plantae Multicellular, cell walls, and chlorophyll Largest and longest-living things on Earth Vascular or Nonvascular
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Nonvascular Plants CANNOT conduct water Example: Moss Moist environment
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Vascular Plants CAN conduct water Capable of living in drier areas Club mosses, Ferns, Horsetails, Gymnosperms, and Angiosperms
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Gymnosperms Seed plant name means “naked seed” Most are conifers
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Angiosperms -Flowering Plants Seed plant name means “covered seed” Seeds are produced inside ovaries A ripened ovary is a fruit largest/most diverse plants
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Sponges (invertebrate) Simplest of the animal groups lives in salt water attached to the bottom Hollow central cavity Two layers of body cells with tiny pores
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Coelenterates (invertebrate) Jellyfish, hydras, and corals two cell layers Live in water hollow body with a single opening
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Flatworms (invertebrate) Flattened body; mostly parasitic one body opening two eyespots (light detection) Turbellarians (free-living) Planarians (freshwater Turbellarians)
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Roundworms (invertebrate) Rounded shaped two body openings (eating and waste expulsion) mostly free-living Ex: Nematodes and hookworms
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Segmented Worms (invertebrate) Rounded, segmented bodies two body openings has five hearts and a brain Ex: leeches and marine tube worms
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Mollusks (invertebrate) Soft-bodies, no shell: (octopus/squid) well-developed organs some with shells: (clams/oysters)
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Arthropods (invertebrate) Largest group of animals multiple body segments jointed appendages (legs/arms) exoskeleton (hard outer covering)
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Arthropods (continued) Well-developed organs insects, lobsters, crabs, and spiders
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Echinoderms (invertebrate) Spiny skinned animals star fish (sea stars), sand dollars, sea cucumbers flexible arms; tube feet known for regeneration (ability to grow new body parts)
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Vertebrates Have backbones body with a head and most have appendages endoskeleton (internal skeleton for support/protection)
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Vertebrates (continued) Endotherm (warm- blooded); these organisms can control their body temperature from within despite changes in the environment
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Vertebrates (continued) Ectotherm (cold-blooded); body temperature changes with the environment
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Jawless fishes Ex: Sea lamprey mouth is used for sucking fluids; no appendages (fins) flexible skeleton made of cartilage ectotherms
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Cartilaginous Fishes Two pairs of fins; gills ectotherms strong teeth (sharks) SKELETON MADE OF CARTILAGE stingrays, skates, sharks
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Bony fishes Flounder, eels, trout, and others SKELETON MADE OF BONE gills streamlined bodies (narrow shape) most numerous group of fish
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Amphibians Frogs, toads, salamanders part of their life is spent on land and part of life is spent in the water; (ectotherms) smooth, moist skin gills when they are young and have lungs as adults
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Reptiles Adapted to live on land (terrestrial) breathe with lungs body covered with plates or scales ectotherms
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Reptiles Dinosaurs Turtles, snakes, lizards, crocodiles, and alligators lay eggs in a leathery shell
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Birds Bodies adapted for flight (light, bones, feathers, and wings) Scaly legs and feet lay eggs in a hard shell endotherms
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Mammals Advanced nervous system; highly developed brain Endotherms Hairy bodies can occupy several habitats give birth to live young; produce milk mammary glands
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