Classification of Organisms
Because there are so many known
species, a system of classification is needed for 3 reasons:
a. Organize
species into groups and discuss them.
b. Identify
new organisms.
c. Show
relationships between organisms.
Taxonomy
a. The
science of classifying organisms.
b. The
Binomial system
·
Developed
by Carolus Linnaeus.
·
Each
organism is given a two part name using Latin as a standard language providing
a uniform means of communication for all people. This avoids the confusion
caused by organisms with different common names in different areas.
·
The
format is Genus species or G. species. e.g., Castor Canadensis
·
Genus
name is capitalized and may be abbreviated by the first initial. Species name
is not capitalized and cannot be used alone. e.g., C. canadensis.
·
The
2 part name gives clues about relationships between organisms. For instance, Ursus americanus, U. horribilis, U. arctos, and U.
maritimus are all related.
·
Names
were based largely on physical appearances but modern taxonomists use genetic
information, molecular biology, and phylogeny (historical evolution) as other
criteria for classifying.
·
The
work of Charles Darwin introduced the idea of considering evolutionary history.
c. The
taxonomic hierarchy
·
The
binomial classification system is hierarchal. The levels of organization are
kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species.
In plants, fungi and algae phyla also called divisions. Each of these levels is
called a taxon.
·
Note
that the genus and species name are italicized because they are Latin. When
handwriting, underline the words. Other levels are capitalized but no special
print features are used.
d. What
is a species?
i. Capable
of reproducing with one another.
ii. Individuals
of one species may appear quite dissimilar.
iii. Offspring
may appear different from one another.
iv. Individuals
from different species do not generally reproduce with one another.
v. Estimates
on the number of species range from 2 and 100 million species on the planet
although about 1.4 million species are currently named and described. Note that
this is for eukaryotic species only. It is much more difficult to estimate the
number of prokaryotic species.
The
six kingdoms system
·
Originally
there were only two kingdoms recognized: animals and plants.
·
Later,
these two were divided into five: animals, plants, fungi, protists,
and bacteria. Each kingdom evolved from different single-celled ancestors.
·
Most
people now recognize 6 kingdoms:
(a) Two
prokaryotic (Kingdom Monera) - asexual reproduction
(1) Archaebacteria are very ancient
bacteria.
` (2) Eubacteria are more modern
bacteria.
(a) Inhabit
nearly every known habitat
(b) Prokaryotic
(c) Consumers,
producers, and decomposers
(d) Some
cause disease but most are harmless
(b) Four eukaryotic - sexual reproduction
(1) Kingdom
Protista
(a) Contains
mostly unicellular organisms, including algae, although there are some exceptions.
Members have been lumped together in this kingdom because they don’t seem to
fit anywhere else.
(b) Eukaryotic
(c) Some
show characteristics of animals, some plants
(2) Kingdom
Fungi
(a) Eukaryotic
(b) Contains multicellular species and single-celled yeasts.
(c) Have
some characteristics of plants but differ in that they are not photosynthetic.
(d) Decomposers
(e) Reproduce
by spores
(3) Kingdom
Plantae
(a) Eukaryotic
(b) Multicellular
(c) Producers
(d) Cell
wall made of cellulose
(4) Kingdom
Animalia
(a) Multicellular
(b) Eukaryotic
(c) Consumers
(d) Motile
·
There
are greater differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes than between plants
and animals. Also, there is greater diversity between the two prokaryotic
groups than among all eukaryotic groups.
·
Evolution
of kingdoms
i. Bacteria
first appeared over 3 billion years ago and were the only organisms on Earth
for about 2 billion years.
ii. Fungi,
plants and animals are well-defined evolutionary groups, each having arisen
from different unicellular ancestors.
iii. These
groups are mostly multicellular, and derived from protist ancestors.
Viruses
- where do they fit?
a. Viruses
are not included in any of the six kingdoms.
b. Viruses
are tiny structures and are called particles rather than cells. There is
considerable debate as to whether they are alive or not.
c. They
consist of a protein shell containing some genetic material with no organelles,
no membrane of their own, and they do not divide.
d. They
use the host organelles to reproduce.