Chp. 17 Classification. Characteristics of Living Things Living things are organized (possess...

download Chp. 17 Classification. Characteristics of Living Things Living things are organized (possess structures for every function) Living things make more living.

If you can't read please download the document

description

Stimulus- any condition in the environment that requires an organism to adjust Response- reaction to stimuli Adaptation- enables a response to stimuli (Ex: change in body temp.) Homeostasis- regulation of an organism’s internal environment to maintain conditions Energy- ability to do work ALL LIVING THINGS REQUIRE AN ENERGY SOURCE Evolution- change over time

Transcript of Chp. 17 Classification. Characteristics of Living Things Living things are organized (possess...

Chp. 17 Classification Characteristics of Living Things Living things are organized (possess structures for every function) Living things make more living things (Reproduction) Living things change during their lives (growth- increase in the amount of living material & formation of new structures) Living things adjust to their surroundings Stimulus- any condition in the environment that requires an organism to adjust Response- reaction to stimuli Adaptation- enables a response to stimuli (Ex: change in body temp.) Homeostasis- regulation of an organisms internal environment to maintain conditions Energy- ability to do work ALL LIVING THINGS REQUIRE AN ENERGY SOURCE Evolution- change over time CLASSIFICATION Grouping together of objects or info based on similarities Taxonomy- branch of biology dealing w/grouping & naming of organisms based on: 1. Physical Similarities 2. Chemical Makeup (DNA) 3. Evolutionary Relationships ARISTOTLE Greek philosopher Developed 1 st method of classification He only classified 2 groups- Plant & Animal CAROLUS LINNAEUS Swedish botanist Selected physical characteristics & evolutionary relationships for classification Binomial Nomenclature- invented by Linnaeus, 2 word naming system for species First word is the Genus, second word is the Species (descriptive word) Ex: Homo sapien Scientific names are written in Latin Underlined or in italics 1 st letter is capitalized for the first word, rest are lower case Golden Hamster Mesocricetus auratus Mesocricetus brandti RATS Rattus norvegicus- Norway Rat Rattus rattus- Roof Rat Taxa- organisms grouped into a series of categories Species- most specific (smallest) Genus- group of closely related species Family- group of closely related genera (genus) Ex: Bobcats & lynx are in the same cat family Felidae but have a different genus Order- group of related families Class- group of related orders Phylum- group of related classes Kingdom- group of related phyla (largest) King Phillip came over for good soup Phylogeny Evolutionary history of a species Based on comparative relationships of structures & comparison of modern life forms w/fossils Cladistics System of taxonomy that reconstructs relationships based on similarities Cladogram- branching diagram that shows evolutionary relationships 3 DOMAINS 1. DOMAIN BACTERIA 2. DOMAIN ARCHAEA 3. DOMAIN EUKARYA DOMAIN BACTERIA Bacteria- microscopic, unicellular, prokaryotic, appeared 3.5 bya, 10,0000 species. Ex: Streptococcus (strep throat) Cell walls contain peptidoglycan DOMAIN ARCHAEA Cell walls do not contain peptidoglycan Extremophiles- live in harsh environments Gave rise to eukaryotic cells DOMAIN EUKARYA Membrane bound nucleus and organelles 4 Kingdoms Protista- Eukaryotic, uni/multicellular, live in water, appeared 1 bya, no complex organ system Ex: Amoeba, Paramecium, seaweed Fungi- consumers, dont move, uni/multicellular, heterotrophic, eukaryotic, decomposers (mushroom, mold, yeast) Appeared 400 mya ago Plants- stationary, multicellular, eukaryote, photosynthesis, cell walls, have organ systems, 1 st plant fossil dated 400 mya Plants dont fossilize well Animalia- multicellular, consumer, no cell walls, organ systems, 1 st appeared 700 mya.