Chapter Eighteen: Classification
Format for binomial nomenclature
- Always in italics - First name is Genus (capitalize) - Second name is Species (lowercase)
How many species are there currently?
2 million
How may domains are there? What are they?
3; Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya
What type of scientist was Carl Linnaeus?
A botanist
Why can genes be considered derived characters?
A derived character refers to a particular character that is shared by members of a particular population. Genes are considered to be derived characters because THEY ARE TRANSFER FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION FROM PARENTS TO THEIR OFFSPRING. Genes mutate over time and shared genes contain differences that can be treated as derived characters
Cladistics
A phylogenetic classification system that uses shared derived characters and ancestry as the sole criterion for grouping taxa.
Heterotrophs
An organism that obtains organic food molecules by eating other organisms or their by-products.
Back then, people grouped organisms by _________ or _________ traits, structures that appear similar but come from independent origins
Analogous ; homoloplastic
Which group has no cells and is mobile?
Animalia
What fundamental traits did Linnaeus use to separate plants from animals?
Animals were mobile organisms that used food for energy. Plants were green, photosynthetic organisms that used energy from the sun.
Plantae are heterotrophs or autotrophs?
Autotrophs
Why did scientists place bacteria in their own kingdom, the Monera?
Bacteria lack the nuclei, mitochondria, and chloroplasts found in other forms of life. And they are all prokaryotes
Domain Bacteria vs Domain Archaea
Bacteria- cell walls HAVE peptidoglycan, Archaea- cell walls DONT have peptidoglycan (and they also live in extreme conditions)
Protista are heterotrophs or autotrophs?
Both
What's in the cell walls of Plantae?
Cellulose
Plantae have organelles called ________
Chloroplasts
binomial nomenclature
Classification system in which each species is assigned a two-part scientific name
Why is it confusing to refer to organisms by common names?
Common names vary among languages and even among regions within a single country. Furthermore, different species can share a single common name.
Eukarya
Domain of all organisms whose cells have nuclei, including protists, plants, fungi, and animals
Bacteria
Domain of unicellular prokaryotes that have cell walls containing peptidoglycan; corresponds to eubacteria
Archaea
Domain of unicellular prokaryotes that have cell walls that do not contain peptidoglycan ; corresponds to Archaebacteria
Heterotrophs (Fungi) use digestive _________ that break down food
Enzymes
What did they split Monera into?
Eubacteria and Archaebacteria
Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) is often called the _________
Father of Modern Taxonomy
Which group feeds on dead or decaying organic matter?
Fungi
What is the correct way to write scientific names in the binomial nomenclature system?
Genus is always first and species is always second. The genus name's first letter is capitalized and the species name is lowercase. Everything is italicized
Most members of Animalia develop _______ ________ during embryonic development
Germ layers
Biologists classify all organisms to ______
Group them in logical ways
How did Linnaeus get his last name?
He named himself because he wasn't rich enough to have a surname and the college he went to asked for his surname, so he just can up with one
What are the goals of binomial nomenclature and systematics?
In binomial nomenclature, each species is assigned a two-part scientific name. The goal of systematics is to organize living things into groups that have biological meaning.
How are DNA sequences used in classification?
In general, the more derived genetic characters two species share, the more recently they shared a common ancestor and the more closely they are related in evolutionary terms.
How did Darwin's theory of evolution change the way biologists thought about classification categories?
Instead of basing classification by similarities and differences, they based it on evolutionary relationships. Taxa were arranged by how closely related they are
What was Linnaeus' personal motto?
"God created, Linnaeus organized"
Which group is a "catchall" group of eukaryotes?
"Protista"
How does Linnaeus's system of classification help establish the unity of life?
It shows how all organisms have something in common. The system classifies organisms based on overall similarities and differences to one another. Organisms in the same kingdom may have many differences, but they still have common traits with one another.
Kingdom
Largest and most inclusive group in Linnaean classification
What language was most understood by European scientists? (1700s)
Latin
What was the method Linnaeus adopted to categorize specimens based on?
Morphology
Almost all members of Animalia can _____ except sponges
Move
Are members of Animalia multi or single celled
Multicellular
What types of organisms were placed into the kingdom Fungi?
Mushrooms, yeast, molds
Did Linnaeus know about evolution?
No
Linnaeus original system had only how many kingdoms? Which ones?
Only 2; Animalia and Plantae
Autotrophs
Organisms that are able to make their own food
How did Linnaeus group species into larger taxa?
Over time, Linnaeus's original classification system expanded to include seven hierarchical taxa: species, genus, family, order, class, phylum, and kingdom.
Node
Place where ancestral lineage splits on a Cladogram (also called a fork)
Protista can be _____ -like (algae), _______ -like (amoebas), and _______ -like (slime molds)
Plant, animal, fungus
In 1950s, 3 more kingdoms were added:
Plantae, Animalia, Monera, Protista, Fungi
Why is the kingdom Protista not valid under evolutionary classification? (And is therefore in quotations)
Protista contains groups that share closest common ancestors with other groups, rather than with each other.
Linnaeus's system involves how many "taxonomic" categories?
Seven (Biggest: Kingdom Smallest: Species)
Are protista single-celled or multicellular?
Single celled (but algae are multi)
Why do we need a universal naming system?
So that we can all understand no matter where we are
Linnaeus published his classifications in a catalogue called ________
Systema Naturae
REFER TO THE TABLE IN THE FILL IN THE BLANK NOTES
THE TABLE ABOUT THE DOMAINS AND KINGDOMS
Phylogeny
The evolutionary history of a lineage
What is the goal of evolutionary classification?
The goal of phylogenetic systematics, or evolutionary classification, is to group species into larger categories that reflect lines of evolutionary descent, rather than overall similarities and differences.
Taxonomy
The scientific study of how living things are classified and giving them a universal name
What are the six kingdoms of life as they are now identified?
The six-kingdom system of classification includes the kingdoms Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
What does the tree of life show?
The tree of life shows current hypotheses regarding evolutionary relationships among the taxa within the three domains of life.
What did genomic analysis reveal about the two prokaryotic groups?
They were more different from each other and from eukaryotes than previously thought
Early names for organisms (1700s) were _________ _______
Very long
What do we use now for classification that Linnaeus didn't?
We know more about evolution, we have more advanced technology, and we use genetics
What types of organisms were first placed in the kingdom Protista?
all microorganisms
Organisms in the same group are more _________ ______ to each other than those in other groups
biologically similar
Fungi have what in their cell walls?
chitin
Characteristics shared by members of a Clade and only by members of that clade are called ________
derived characters
Cladogram
diagram depicting patters of shared characteristics among species
Protista
eukaryotic one-celled living organisms distinct from multicellular plants and animals: protozoa, slime molds, and eukaryotic algae a kingdom of mostly one-celled eukaryotic organisms that are different from plants, animals, bacteria, and fungi Kingdom composed of eukaryotes that are not classified as plants, animals, or fungi
Clade
evolutionary branch of a cladogram that includes a single ancestor and all its descendants
A clade includes a common ancestor and all its descendants, living or ____.
extinct
Genus
group of closely related species; the first part of the scientific name in binomial nomenclature
Taxon
group or level of organization into which organisms are classified
monophyletic group
group that consists of a single ancestral species and all its descendants and excludes any organisms that are not descended from that common ancestor
In recent times, biologists have analyzed _____ to compare relationships and led them to adding a level higher than a Kingdom (a Domain)
ribosomal RNA subunits
Systematics
study of the diversity of life and the evolutionary relationships between organisms
Monera
the kingdom that included two different kinds of bacteria but was split up in the 1990s
Morphology
the study of form and structure
Derived character
trait that appears in recent parts of a lineage, but not in its older members
Are members of Animalia heterotrophs or autotrophs?
heterotrophs
Modern scientists try to group organisms based on__________
how closely members of those groups are related to each other
Phylum
in classification, a group of closely related classes
Order
in classification, a group of closely related families
Class
in classification, a group of closely related orders
Family
in classification, group of similar genera
Domain Eukarya
includes Kingdoms Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia (eukaryotes)
Domain
larger, more inclusive taxonomic category than a kingdom