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Six-Kingdom Classification

Six-Kingdom Classification. Mrs. Carol J. Fleck. Classification. Aristotle first classified organisms as either plants or animals…. This was good until…and by air, land and water There are forms of life that do not fit into those categories!!!

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Six-Kingdom Classification

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  1. Six-Kingdom Classification Mrs. Carol J. Fleck

  2. Classification • Aristotle first classified organisms as either plants or animals…. This was good until…and by air, land and water • There are forms of life that do not fit into those categories!!! • Currently, we use the six-Kingdom classification system.. • *** use to be 5, but we separated Eubacteria and Archaebacteria…Why?

  3. The Six Kingdoms • Archaebacteria • Eubacteria • Protista • Fungi • Plantae • Animalia

  4. Archaebacteria • Unicellular prokaryotes. • Do not have a nucleus • Live in Harsh environments. • Reproduce Binary Fission

  5. Eubacteria • Unicellular Prokaryotes • Do not have a nucleus • The bacteria around us • Can be good and bad…how??? • Reproduce Binary Fission

  6. Protista • Most are unicellular eukaryotic • Can be heterotrophic or autotrophic • This is the place to put all Eukaryotes that are not plants, animals, or fungi. • Not necessarily related, but unsure where to place them

  7. Fungi • Multicellular Eukaryotic • Heterotrophic…decomposers • Over 100,000 species of fungi including fungi, mushrooms, mildews, molds.

  8. Plantae • Multicellular eukaryotic • Autotrophic (can make their own food…Photosythesis) • Examples include mosses, ferns, conifers, and flowering plants.

  9. Animalia • Multicellular Eukaryotic • Heterotrophic • Most animals have symmetric body organization and move about in their environment • Examples: Birds, insects, worms, mammals, reptiles, and humans

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