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Published byColeen McCormick Modified over 9 years ago
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Taxonomy Science of describing, naming, and classifying organisms. Designed by Linnaeus Based on morphology (form and structure) –Common name not useful ( ex. Jellyfish)
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Hierarchy Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
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Binomial Nomenclature Two names for every organism Based on Latin First word-Genus to which the organism belongs Second word-Species name of the the organism
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Acer- Genus to which the red maple belongs rubrum- Species description
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Three Domain System Domain Archea –Single-celled prokaryotes that have distinctive cell membranes and cell walls Domain Bacteria –Single-celled prokaryotes that are true bacteria Domain Eukarya –Eukaryote cells
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Taxonomy leads to Phylogeny Evolutionary relationships Morphology Chromosomal Characteristics Sequence of proteins and DNA Embryological development Fossil Record
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Systematics Modern approach to taxonomy Analyzes the diversity of organisms in the context of their natural relationships. Two methods –Phylogenetic Diagram or Tree –Cladogram
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A branching diagram showing the evolutionary or ancestral relationships among a group of organism May change with new discoveries Phylogenetic Tree
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Cladistics or Cladograms Use shared, derived characters as the only criterion for grouping taxa to see how closely they are related. A clade includes an ancestor and all of its descendants Shared characteristic is a feature that all members of a group have in common Derived character is a feature that evolved only within the group under consideration. (ex. Feathers are derived for birds) An out-group is a group that is distantly related, starting point for comparisons ( choose by determining which has fewer traits in common)
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Using Dichotomous Keys http://www.students.ed.qut.edu.au/n2364379/ MDB377/DichotomousKey.html
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All in the Family http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/change/fa mily/
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