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Week 14 Lecture 20 May 2014

Week 14 Lecture 20 May 2014. Classification of living things. Adaptations. The successive presence of traits which are best suited to support an organism to survive in its habitat Can be: Structural (related to structure of organism) Behavioural (related to what organism does to survive)

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Week 14 Lecture 20 May 2014

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  1. Week 14 Lecture20 May 2014 Classification of living things

  2. Adaptations • The successive presence of traits which are best suited to support an organism to survive in its habitat • Can be: • Structural (related to structure of organism) • Behavioural (related to what organism does to survive) • Physiological (related to how an organism functions on the inside)

  3. Evolution • Basis of theory is that all derive from a common ancestor • Shows increasing levels of complexity, as described in vertebrate cladogram below • The large diversity of life is the result of ongoing process of evolution

  4. Taxonomy- the classification of living things • Based on grouping organisms according to similarities in physical characteristics • Basic framework was developed by Carolus Linnaeus (1735) in ‘SystemaNaturae’) • Relationships between organisms (how they evolved) has been enhanced by genetic studies

  5. Principles of classification • Reflects evolutionary distances and relationships between organisms • Organisms that have the same common ancestors are members of the same family tree • Organisms are classified into levels from broadly similar (kingdom) to the same species • At each level certain characteristics will be the same for all organism in that grouping.

  6. Levels of classification • Some levels can be divided into sub-levels (eg subclass of mammaliaare the monotremes) • Increasing number of groups at all levels • A species is a group of organisms that are able to reproduce to create viable offspring • A species share the ‘same’ DNA

  7. Humans • ½ of all animal species are insects • 4% species are chordates • 0.4% species are mammals

  8. Kingdoms • There are five kingdoms (classified according to cellular arrangement, locomotion and method of nutrition • Animalia (sponges, worms, insects fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals) • Plantae (mosses, ferns, pines, woody and non-woody flowering plants) • Fungi (fungi, molds, yeasts and smuts) • Viruses and prions • Protista (protozoans and algae) • Monera (bacteria, blue-green algae and spirochetes)

  9. Phylum • There are 33 phylum in the animal kingdom • Egs • Athropoda (external skeleton, jointed bodies and limbs such as spiders, insects, centipedes, lobsters) • Mollusca (soft segmented bodies, enclosed in hard shells such as snails) • Chordata (elongated, bilaterally symmetrical bodies, have gills slits at one point in their lives, have a notochord at some stage in their development, have digestive system such as humans, mammals, birds, fish as well as sea squirts)

  10. Class • There are 7 classes in the vertebrate phyla. • These classes are grouped according to their skeletal system, environmental adaptation and reproductive system • There are: • Three classes of fish (jawless fish/sharks and rays/bony fish) • Amphibia (frogs, toads and salamanders which live on land and breed in the water) • Reptilia (have lungs, has an amniote, leathery egg including snakes, lizards and alligators) • Aves (amniote egg which is laid off the ground, and include birds) • Mammalia (have live young, feed them milk, have strong jaws, are warm blooded and include primates, whales, platypus etc)

  11. Classification of living things • Watch the following You-tube video and note down the levels of classification for species shown Classification of Living Things by Mark Drollinger www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqxomJIBGcY

  12. Homework- • Work on your SAE2 case study report! • See conditions of assessment and SAE2 information on wiki • Birds and plastic waste-

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