Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byArchibald Arnold Modified over 9 years ago
1
Chapter 18 Classification 18-1 Finding Order in Diversity
2
Why Classify? Organisms need a name Need to be put into groups that have biological meaning Taxonomy - discipline of classifying organisms and assigning each organism a universally accepted name
3
Assigning Scientific Names Many organisms have more than one common name Scientists needed a way to communicate what organism they were talking about Early attempts at classifying were very confusing
4
Some scientists used phonetic spellings Others used names that were overly descriptive Long names made it hard to classify Agreed on using Latin and Greek for names
5
Binomial nomenclature System where each organism is given a two- part scientific name Developed by Carolus Linnaeus, a Swedish botanist Each organism has a genus name and a species name
6
Genus - name of group of closely related species Species - name that is usually a Latinized description of a characteristic Scientific names need to be written in italics or underlined Genus name is always capitalized, species is always lowercase
7
Examples Red maple –Acer ruburm or Acer rubrum Polar bear –Ursus maritimus or Ursus maritimus
8
Linnaeus’s System Contains seven levels Arranges organisms in groups based on similarities Each classification level is called a taxon
9
Levels from largest to smallest Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
10
Mnemonic for Levels King Phil came over for green socks
11
Human classification Kingdom - Animalia Phylum - Chordata Class - Mammalia Order - Primates Family - Hominidae Genus - Homo (Homo) Species - sapiens (sapiens)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.