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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies How We Name Living Things Chapter 12 Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission required for reproduction or display
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Outline Linnaean System Species Names Species Definition Building Family Trees Cladograms Traditional Models Kingdoms Domains
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Invention of the Linnaean System Classification - Multilevel grouping of individuals. Organisms first classified by Aristotle over 2,000 years ago. - Eventually groups started to be formed and referred to as genera (singular, genus). Starting in middle ages, names began to be systematically written down using Latin.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Invention of the Linnaean System Classification scheme of the Middle Ages (polynomial system) was used replaced with a binomial system by Linnaeus about 250 years ago. Polynomial - Strings of latin words and phrases containing up to 12 words. Binomial - Two-part name for each species.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Species Names Taxa - Group of organisms at a particular level in a classification system (Taxonomy). By convention: First word of binomial name is genus and is always capitalized. Second word refers to particular species and is not capitalized. - Together form Scientific Name, written in italics.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Higher Categories Species Genus Family Order Class Phylum Kingdom Kindly Pay Cash Or Furnish Good Security.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Hierarchical Classification System
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Species Definition Biological Species Concept (Ernst Mayr) Species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding natural populations which are reproductively isolated from other such groups. - Problems Assumes regular outcrossing Assumes strong reproductive barriers Hybrids ?
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Building A Family Tree Systematics - Reconstruction and study of evolutionary trees (Phylogenetic trees). Clade - Organisms related by descent. - Cladistics - Constructing phylogeny according to similarities derived from common ancestor. Produce branching cladogram. Compare outgroup (different organism) to the ingroup.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Cladogram of Vertebrate Animals Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission required for reproduction or display
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Building A Family Tree Because evolutionary success depends on high-impact events, modern cladistics attempts to weight evolutionary significance of characters. Traditional Taxonomy Phylogenies constructed based on vast amount of information about morphology and biology of the organism gathered over a long period of time.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Two Methods Of Classification Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission required for reproduction or display
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies The Better Approach is….. Traditional taxonomy is the better approach when a great deal of information is available to guide character weighting. Cladistics is the better approach when little information is available about how the character affects the life of an organism.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Kingdoms of Life Most Biologists use a six-kingdom system. Animalia Plantae Fungi Protista Archaebacteria Eubacteria Domains - taxonomic level above kingdoms.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Domain Archaea Share key characteristics: Cells wall lack peptidoglycan Possess unusual lipids and ribosomal RNA Three General Categories Methanogens - Obtain energy by using hydrogen gas to reduce carbon dioxide to methane gas.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Domain Archaea (Archaebacteria) Extremophiles - Grow under extreme conditions. Thermophiles - Heat Halophiles - Salt Pressure-tolerant Nonextreme Archaebacteria - Grow in same environment as eubacteria.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Evolutionary Relationship
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Domain Bacteria (Eubacteria) Most abundant organisms on earth. Most taxonomists recognize 12-15 major groups. Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission required for reproduction or display
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Domain Eukarya (Eukaryotes) Appear in fossil record only about 1.5 billion years ago. Complex cellular organization. Fungi, Plants, and Animals are well- defined evolutionary groups. - Largely multicellular Diversity among protists is much greater than within or between Fungi, Plants, and Animals.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Domain Eukarya (Eukaryotes) With few exceptions, all modern eukaryotic cells possess energy-producing organelles (Mitochondria). Some protist phyla have also acquired chloroplasts and are photosynthetic. - Mitochondria and chloroplasts are both believed to have entered early eukaryotic cells by endosymbiosis.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Viruses Viruses do not satisfy the basic criteria of life, thus are not living organisms. Appear to be fragments of nucleic acids originally derived from genome of a living cell. - Infect organisms at all taxonomic levels.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Evolutionary Relationships Among Kingdoms
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Review Linnaean System Species Names Species Definition Building Family Trees Cladograms Traditional Models Kingdoms Domains
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission required for reproduction or display
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