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CLASSIFICATION Chapter 14 Finding Order in Diversity
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TAXONOMY Discipline of classifying organisms & give each a name
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WHY CLASSIFY? 1.To name organisms 2.To group them in a logical way
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WHY CLASSIFY? 3.Classification makes life easier.
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CLASSIFICATION Organisms are put into groups that have biological significance
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SCIENTIFIC NAMES 1.Give Biologists a way to communicate 2.Many organisms may have several names. Ex: Cougar: mountain lion, puma or catamount. Photo courtesy Texas Parks and Wildlife Department © 2004 Felis concolor
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BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE Developed by Carl Linnaeus –Swedish botanist Two-name naming system
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BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE First name: Genus –first letter is capitalized –italics or underlined –Share important characteristics Homo sapien Ursus arctos Grizzly bear picture is reproduced with permission from WWF. © 2004 WWF- World Wide Fund For Nature (Formerly World Wildlife Fund). All Rights Reserved. www.panda.org. www.panda.org.
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Second name: species –first letter is lower-case –Italics or underlined –One particular kind of organism Homo sapien Ursus arctos BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE
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LEVELS OF CLASSIFICATION Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
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LEVELS OF CLASSIFICATION Domain –largest & most inclusive Species –smallest & most specific
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CLASSIFICATION & RELATIONSHIPS The more shared levels, the more related
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What do the scientific names of the polar, grizzly & panda bears tell you about their similarity to each other? Ursus maritimusUrsus arctos Ailuropoda melanoleuca Pictures reproduced with permission from WWF. © 2004 WWF- World Wide Fund For Nature (Formerly World Wildlife Fund). All Rights Reserved. www.panda.org.www.panda.org.
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OrganismCatWolfFly KingdomAnimalia PhylumChordata Arthropoda ClassMammalia Insecta OrderCarnivora Diptera FamilyFelidaeCanidaeMuscidae GenusFelisCanisMusca SpeciesF. domesticus C. lupusM. domestica
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EVOLUTIONARY CLASSIFICATION Organisms are grouped into categories that represent relationships Phylogeny (Evolutionary Tree): Evolutionary relationships among organisms.
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Not all features are inherited from a common ancestor Convergent evolution: Similarities evolve in organisms not closely related Due to living in similar habitats Ex: Wings of a bird and insect
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CLADOGRAM A BC DE F Speciation: formation of two new species from one Clade or lineage TIMETIME
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CLADOGRAM: Vertebrates Fur & Mammary Glands Jaws Lungs Claws or Nails Feathers Hagfish Fish Frog Lizard Pigeon Mouse Chimp Derived characteristic: Evolved in one group but not another
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Matching: Mammals Animals with backbones Insects All animals A. B. C. D. C B D A
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