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Classification: Chapter 17 Taxonomy 6 Kingdoms Dissection notes

Classification: Chapter 17 Taxonomy 6 Kingdoms Dissection notes. References: Holt Biology & sources as noted by page. Taxonomy. Taxonomy is the science of describing, naming, and classifying organisms.

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Classification: Chapter 17 Taxonomy 6 Kingdoms Dissection notes

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  1. Classification: Chapter 17Taxonomy6 KingdomsDissection notes References: Holt Biology & sources as noted by page.

  2. Taxonomy • Taxonomyis the science of describing, naming, and classifying organisms. • The branch of biology that names & groups organisms -according to their characteristics & evolutionary history. • A Universal System was designed to Eliminate the use of Common Names and Confusion in the Scientific World.

  3. Use of Common Names • COMMON NAMES, such as “robin” or “fir tree”, for organisms created some problems • common names varied from one locale to next & did not describe species accurately. Use of long Latin names • Used by scientists before 1700’s,- did not show relationships between species & were inconvenient, hard to understand.

  4. Describe a problem with each of these common names : -Starfish -Seahorse -Jelly fish -Peanut -Catfish -Tiger shark How are their names misleading? Discuss problems when 1 organism has 2 common names: Example- firefly & lightening bug

  5. Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) “Father of Modern Taxonomy” • He used morphology (which is the organism’s structure & form) • Grouped organisms into hierarchical categories

  6. Carl Linnaeus • Formed “Taxa” (groups of organisms) • (Used Latin for the Names because it was the language of educated people) • Morphology -the STRUCTURAL SIMILARITIES BETWEEN ORGANISMS • Series of hierarchical categoriesused to show relationships • He had 2 KINGDOMS: PLANTAE & ANIMALIA.

  7. B. Modern classification system is based on morphological similarities. • Hierarchy of eight groups (Taxa) • Domains- include all six kingdoms • Kingdom – a taxon of similar phyla or divisions • Phylum – (phyla-plural)- taxon of similar classes • Class – taxon of similar orders • Order – taxon of similar families • Family – group of similar genera • Genus – group of similar species • species – most exclusive, specific group. Members of this grouping can mate, produce viable offspring • (varieties)– same species but with slight differences • (subspecies) – same species, different location

  8. 8 Modern Levels of Classification (From the most general to the most specific) • Domain • Kingdom • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Genus • Species Species- is the smallest, most specific group- contains only 1 kind of organism. You need to know these!

  9. Pneumonic Devicespick one to help you remember the taxa • Keep Penguins Cool Or Find Good Shelter or • Kennywood Park Can Open For Good Summers. or • King Phillip Comes Over For Good Spaghetti

  10. Binomial Nomenclaturemeans Two Name Naming • Uses the last 2 categories (the most specific) to name things. uses the Genus & Species for the 2 parts of the name • Always Capitalize the Genus but Not the Species Identifier. • Both are either underlined or italicized.

  11. Using Binomial Nomenclature • Acer rubrum- RED MAPLE TREE • Acer is the Latin name for Maple (genus) • rubrum is the Latin word for Red(species) •   Can beAbreviated: A.rubrum. • Homo sapiens -HUMANS • Homo -large brain & upright posture. sapiensfor our intelligence & ability to speak. Abbreviated H. sapiens

  12. Additional Categories • Zoologists • use term“SUBSPECIES”for variations that may occur in species from different geographical locations-ie, timber wolf and the northern timber wolf- ex Canis Lupus sspoccidentalis • Botanists • May use the term “division” instead of phylum • sometimes split species into Subsets known as VARIETIES.Example: peaches & nectarines are varieties of Prunuspersica var.

  13. Additional Categories • Microbiologists- Bacteria are also broken into subsets called STRAINS. Example: Escherichia Coli – some strains are harmless, even helpful;- live in our intestines, but strain E. coli 157 is responsible for food poisoning deaths. According to the CDC there are an estimated 73,000 cases of E. Coli infection every year in the United States. The typical symptoms are bloody diarrhea and (if severe) kidney failure. These symptoms most commonly appear when a person has eaten undercooked or contaminated ground beef.

  14. Phylogeny • organizes the diversity of living organisms in the context of evolution. • are based on several types of evidence: • Fossil Record • Morphology • Embryology • Chromosomes & Macromolecules

  15. Phylogenetic Trees • A family tree that shows evolutionary relationships thought to exist among organisms. • Is a hypothesis about the relationships. • Is subject to change - as more evidence is learned.

  16. Which organisms are mostly closely related? Which ones are most distantly related?

  17. Animal kingdom phylogenetic tree

  18. Taxonomic Groups3 domains, 6 kingdoms 1. Domain Archaea • aligns with Kingdom Archaebacteria, are single-celled prokaryotic cells that have distinctive cell walls& are “ancient bacteria” 2. Domain Bacteria • aligns with Kingdom Eubacteria,are single-celled prokaryotic cells that are “true bacteria”. 3. Domain Eukarya • Domain Eukarya includes the kingdoms Protista, Fungi, Plantae, & Animalia. • All members of this domain have eukaryotic cells.

  19. SIX KINGDOMS GROUP ORGANISMS TOGETHER THAT HAVE SIMILARITIES SUCH AS MAJOR CELLULAR STRUCTURE, METHODS OF OBTAINING NUTRIENTS, AND METABOLISM.

  20. A closer look at each of the 6 kingdoms:

  21. Domain: Archaea, kingdomArchaeavs.Domain: Bacteria, Kingdom Eubacteria • Organisms in the Kingdoms Eubacteria & Archaea are very different from each other, both genetically & biochemically! • Archaea have been found in temperatures above the boiling point and in cold that would freeze your blood. • Eubacteria are the “regular” bacteria.

  22. Domain:Archaea, KingdomArchaea 1. Archaea • “archae”- from the Greek for "ANCIENT".Scientists think these are similar to Earth’s First Organisms • “Extremophiles”– Many types of Archaeans live in HARSH ENVIRONMENTS Some types are • Methanogens • Themoacidophiles • Extreme Halophiles

  23. Methanogens Live in ANAEROBIC Environments, • Produce Methane Gas, a byproduct of metabolism in conditions of very low oxygen • Includes Chemosynthetic Bacteria. • Lives in the Intestines of Mammals. • Methanobrevibactersmithii is the prominent methanogen in the human gut, where it helps digest polysaccharides (sugars). http://www.nature.com/nrgastro/journal/v8/n10/full/nrgastro.2011.159.html

  24. Thermoacidophiles- living in Sulfurous Hot Springs & Volcanic VentsThey “love”“acid” & “heat”

  25. Extreme HalophilesLive in Very Salty Places (like the great Salt lake & the Dead Sea)(Halite is the mineral name for NaCl)

  26. Domain: Bacteria, Kingdom Eubacteria 2. “true” or Eubacteria • The first thing you probably think of when you say this word is “disease”- something like strep. throat or maybe an infection in a cut. • Most of the bacteria that are disease causing are Eubacteria. • NOTE: Only about 1% of bacteria are disease causing.

  27. Domain: Bacteria, Kingdom Eubacteria • Many bacteria are very helpful organisms. • Actinomycetes, produce antibiotics such as streptomycin and nocardicin; • others live symbiotically in the guts of animals (including humans) or elsewhere in their bodies, or on the roots of certain plants, converting nitrogen into a usable form. • Bacteria put the tang in yogurt and the sour in sourdough bread; • help to break down dead organic matter; & make up the base of the food web in many environments.

  28. Domain: Bacteria, Kingdom Eubacteria “True” Bacteria: So remember- Most bacteria are beneficial • Benign (benign = good, friendly, kind) • Pathogens (means disease causing -only a few are “bad guys”) • Bacteria occur in 3 basic shapes:cocci, bacilli & spiral. Many are named by their shape. biology.clc.uc.edu

  29. Examples of common bacteria Lactobacillus acidophilus Streptococcus pneumoniae Escherichia coli answersingenesis.org http://www.oley.org/lifeline/Probiotics.html genome.microbio.uab.edu

  30. Domain: Eukarya, Kingdom Protista 3. Protists • Made of a variety of organisms that don’t “fit” anywhere else. (Some are not very much like the others in this group.) • EUKARYOTIC (has a true nucleus) • 50,000 species- many unicellular, some are like fungi, some like plants or animals. • Includes protozoans, unicellular algae, slime molds & water molds

  31. Examples of Protists includes slime molds & protozoans like Euglena, Paramecium, Ameoba

  32. Domain: Eukarya, Kingdom Fungi 4. Fungi • Can be Unicellular or multicellular • HETEROTROPHIC (eats something else) • NOT like plants (photosyntheic) (this is why they were kicked out of the plant kingdom) 100,000 species of mushrooms, puffballs, rusts, mildew & molds

  33. Agaricus bisporus: The Button Mushroom Fungi Examples: Stink horn Candida albicans- can cause yeast Infections- like this mouth thrush fcps.edu reference.medscape.com http://www.mushroomexpert.com/agaricus_bisporus.html

  34. Domain: Eukarya, Kingdom Plantae 5. Plantae • Multicellular & • Photosynthetic (Autotrophs) (They make their own food & are the chief food producers of the world.) • Found in all the types of environments: aquatic algae, amphibian mosses, and terrestrial ferns and seed-bearing plants. • 350,000 species identified.

  35. Phylogenetic tree of the plant kingdom

  36. Domain: Eukarya, Kingdom Animalia 6. Animalia • Eukaryotic, • Multicellular • Heterotrophic • Most animals are symmetrical • Movement at some time in their life cycle.

  37. Examples of animals biology.kenyon.edu

  38. The Major Animal Phyla • Invertebrate: • Porifera(sponges) • Cnidaria (jellyfish ,coral) • Ctenophora (comb jellies) • Platyhelminthes (flatworms) • Nematoda(roundworms) • Annelida(segmented worms)- **add this phyla to your sheet!!! (these are the earthworms & leeches) • Rotifera (tiny aquatic free-living animals) • Mollusca (snails, clams, squid, Octopi) • Arthropoda • arachnids, • Crusteceans • myriapoda • Insects • Echinoderms –starfish, sea stars. Sea urchins

  39. Last phylum is Chordata • There are 2 invertebrate chordates: • Lancelet • Tunicates • All the rest of animals in Chordata are vertebrate classes

  40. Vertebrate: classes • Hagfishes (Myxini) • Lampreys (Cephalaspidomorphi) • Sharks (Chondrichthyes) • Ray-finned fishes • Lobe-Finned Fishes • Amphibians • Reptiles • Birds • Mammals (orders of mammals) -Monotremes -Marsupials -Placental mammals

  41. NEXT: Dissection Notes: • Squid • Earthworm • Frog • Which are invertebrates?

  42. Animal Kingdom,Invertebrate Phylum Annelida, Class Oligochaeta • Most familiar is the earthworm. Structure and Movement • Segmented body has over 100 nearly-identical segments. • Circular and longitudinal muscles line the interior body wall.

  43. Earthworms Feeding /Digestion Ingest soil as they burrow through it. • Soil is moved through these structures: • mouth • pharynx • esophagus • crop • gizzard • intestine • anus • Earthworms play an important role in the condition of soil.

  44. Closed circulatory system. • “Heart” is 5 aortic arches • Also- have large dorsal blood vessel • pump blood through the vessels of the body Respiration and Excretion • Oxygen & CO2 diffuse through moist skin, • Cellular wastes and excess water are excreted through nephridia. Neural Control • Consists of a chain of ganglia connected by a ventral nerve cord.

  45. Reproduction • Earthworms are hermaphrodites, but an individual worm cannot fertilize its own eggs. • During mating, earthworms press their ventral surfaces together. • Held together by their setae and by a film of mucus secreted by each worm’s clitellum. • Fertilization occurs inside the tube, which forms a protective case for the young worms.

  46. Earthworms reproducing http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/97/Earthworm _klitellum_copulation_beentree.jpg/800px-Earthworm_klitellum_copulation_beentree.jpg

  47. Earthworm diagrams

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