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Transcript of Starter 9/1/09 p 53 # 7 Time to finish starter. Starter 9/2/09 p 53 #’s 1-5 Time to finish...
Starter 9/1/09
•p 53 # 7• Time to finish starter
Starter 9/2/09
• p 53 #’s 1-5
• Time to finish starter
Classification
• The arrangement of organisms into orderly groups based on their similarities
• Living and extinct are classified
Why?
• Make sense of the great number and diversity of organisms, living and extinct.
• Makes it easier to study characteristics of and relationships between different organisms, they are grouped according to their shared characteristics and their relationship.
Carolus Linnaeus
• Swedish physician and botanist who is the founder of taxonomy—the science of describing, classifying, and naming living things.
• He identified according to shared characteristics
Modern Classification
• Based on shared characteristics and how closely related living things are
• The more characteristics organisms share the closer the relationship.
Branching Diagrams• Shows similarities and
differences
• Animals with branches close to each other share a common ancestor (are closely related)
• Branches split when a species develops a unique unshared characteristic
8 Levels of Classification• Domain
• Kingdom
• Phylum
• Class
• Order
• Family
• Genus
• Species
• Did• King• Phillip • Come• Over• From • Great• Spain
•Do
• Kings
• Play
• Chess
• On
• Fat
• Guys’
•Stomachs
Scientific Naming• When classifying an organism, biologists
give it a scientific name which never changes
• 2-part name in Latin or Greek (helps to avoid confusion between languages—used worldwide, scientists can communicate)
• 1st word: genus (capitalized), 2nd: species (lowercase)—both parts are underlined or italicized
• Indian elephant—Elephas maximus
(E. maximus)
Dichotomous Keys• Special guides that
aid in identifying unknown organisms
• Several pairs of descriptive statements that have only 2 alternative responses
• Answers lead to other steps
• Organism is eventually identified
1. a. This mammal flies. Its hand is formed into a wing. Little brown batb. This mammal does not fly. Go to step 22. a. This mammal has a naked (no fur) tail. Go to step 3b. This mammal doesn’t have a naked tail. Go to step 43. a. This mammal has a short, naked tail. Eastern moleb. This mammal has a long, naked tail. Go to step 54. a. This mammal has a black mask across its face. Raccoonb. This mammal does not have a black mask across its face. Go to step 65. a. This mammal has a tail that is flattened and shaped like a paddle. Beaverb. This mammal has a tail that is not flattened or shaped like a paddle. Opossum6. a. This mammal is brown with a white underbelly. Go to step 7b. This mammal is not brown with a white underbelly. Go to step 87. a. This mammal has a long, furry tail that is black on the tip. Longtail weaselb. This mammal has a long tail without much fur. White-footed mouse8. a. This mammal is black with a narrow white stripe on its forehead andbroad white stripes on its back. Striped skunkb. This mammal is not black with white stripes. Go to step 99. a. This mammal has long ears and a short, cottony tail. Eastern cottontailb. This mammal has short ears and a medium-length tail. Woodchuck
1. a. wings covered by an exoskeleton ………go to step 2 b. wings not covered by an exoskeleton …..go to step 3
2. a. body has a round shape …………………...ladybug b. body has an elongated shape …………..grasshopper
3. a. wings point out from the side of body……dragonfly b. wings point to the posterior of the body ….housefly
•Starter 9/7/10 –
Section Review p 53
Domains and Kingdoms• For a long time, all
organisms were classified into 2 kingdoms: Plantae or Animalia.
• Euglena were discovered—characteristics of both plants and animals. What now??
Domains and Kingdoms3 Domains:
• Archaea– Kingdom Archebacteria
• Bacteria– Kingdom Eubacteria
• Eukarya– 4 Kingdoms:– Prostista– Fungi– Plantae– Animalia
Domain Archaea
• “Archae” = “ancient”
• Live in extreme environments– Hot springs– Deep ocean
vents
Tiny single-celled organisms, prokaryotes (no nuclei or membrane bound organells).
Domain Bacteria Tiny single-celled organisms,
prokaryotes (____________). • Most bacteria
• Live in soil, water, human body
• Escherichia coli
– In intestines
– Produce vitamin K
Domain Eukarya• All organisms that have a nucleus and
membrane bound organelles.
• Four Kingdoms:
– Protista
– Fungi
– Plantae
– Animalia
Protista• Single-celled or simple
multicellular
• Can act like plants, animals, or fungus but are not plants, animals, or fungi
• Most diverse
• Protozoa (animal-like), algae and kelp (plant-like), slime molds/water molds(fungus-like)
Fungi• Complex, multicellular
• A fungus called Penicillum produces penicillin, an antibiotic. Yeast is used in bread making
• Absorb nutrients from surroundings after breaking them down with digestive juices (decomposers-nature’s recyclers)
• Molds, mushrooms, yeast
• Reproduce by using spores
• Starter 9/13/10 – p 63 20-23
Plantae
• Complex multicellular• Photosynthetic—
capture sun’s energy to make sugar
• Plant cells have cell walls
• Vary in size and form
Animalia• Complex multicellular
• Move from place to place
• Nervous systems that help sense and react
• They must ingest/eat their food
• Depend on bacteria and fungi to recycle nutrients in dead organisms