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Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

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Page 1: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Grouping Organisms

And Classification

Page 2: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Age of Life on Earth

• 3.5 million years ago

• 1.5 million species named by classification system called taxonomy (to name and group organisms in a logical manner)

Page 3: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Domains3 largest classification groups

Archaea

Eubacteria

Eukarya

Page 4: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

THREE Domains…Kingdoms

Eubacteria Archaea Eukarya(true bacteria) (extreme (protists

bacteria) fungi plants

animals)(Prokaryotic)No true nucleus True Nucleus

Page 5: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

TAXONS

Kingdom

Phylum

Class

Order

Family

Genus

Species

Page 6: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

TAXONS

Kingdom

Phylum

Class

Order

Family

Genus

Species

King

Phillip

Could

Order

Five

Greasy

Subs

Page 7: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Six Kingdoms: Get Handout

Page 8: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Two Domains: Prokaryotic

• Genetic material NOT in a nucleus

• INCLUDES:

• Eubacteria –true bacteria• Archaea –extreme bacteria

Page 9: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Kingdom: Archaea

• Prokaryotic –no nucleus

• Cell walls with no peptidoglycan

• Unicellular – one celled

• Live in most extreme environments

Page 10: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

What is peptidoglycan?

• A cross-linked complex of polysaccharides and peptides found in the cell walls of bacteria

• (in other words:• Starch and protein)

Page 11: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Kingdom: Archaea

• Thermophiles –love heat

• Psychrophiles –cold-loving

• Acidophiles –love acidic environments

• Halophiles-love salty

• Barophiles-high pressure (ocean bottom)

Page 12: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Archaea

• Thermus aquaticus (Taq)

Page 13: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

ArchaeaSulfur-loving

Page 14: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Kingdom: EUBACTERIA (true bacteria)

• Prokaryotic – no nucleus

• Cell wall with peptidoglycan

• Unicellular –one-celled

• Diverse environments and metabolism

Page 15: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Eubacteria

• Staphyloccus

• Anthracis bacillus

Page 16: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Eubacteria

• Neisseria gonorrhoeae

• E. coli

Page 17: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Eukarya

HAVE A NUCLEUSAll other organisms

Protists FungiAnimalsPlants

Page 18: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Kingdom: Protista

• Eukaryotic – DO have a nucleus

• Usually unicellular

• Amoeba nucleus

• Varied cell walls

Page 19: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Protista Examples

Euglena • Paramecium

Page 20: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Kingdom: FUNGI

• Eukaryotic

• Cell walls of chitin –stiffener

• Can be multicellular or unicellular

Page 21: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Fungi

•Yeast

•Can you see the budding?

Page 22: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Kingdom: Plantae

• Eukaryotic

• Cell wall made of cellulose

• Multicellular –more than one cell

• Autotrophic –photosynthetic – make their own food

Page 23: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Examples:

Page 24: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

What is cellulose?

Stiff, interlocking fibers in plants

Page 25: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Kingdom: Animalia

• Eukaryotic

• No cell wall

• Multicellular

• Heterotrophic –need to get food from other sources (plants and animals)

Page 26: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Animalia

Page 27: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Animalia Phyla

• Porifera (Sponges)• Cnidaria (jellyfish)• Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)• Nematoda (Roundworms)• Mollusca (octopus, clams) • Annelida (Segmented Worms)• Arthropoda (insects)• Echinodermata (starfish)• Chordata (mammals, fish, birds, reptiles)

Page 28: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification
Page 29: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylum Porifera

• “pore bearer”

• Empty sac with pore cells on outside

• sponges

• Porifera Video

Page 30: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylum Cnidaria

• “stinging nettle”

• Jellyfish, coral, sea anemones

• Radial symmetry, tissues, prey on animals

• Phylum Cnidaria (Jellyfish) swimming, close-up

Page 31: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylum Platyhelminthes

• Means “flat and wide worm”

• Live in sea and fresh water

• Some are parasites

• One opening - food/wastes

• Bilaterally symmetrical

• Planaria, tapeworms

• Stock Video of A planaria on plant stems

Page 32: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylum Nematoda

• Means “thread”

• One body opening for food and one for wastes

• Trichina worm, hookworm

Page 33: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylum Mollusca

• Means “soft bodied”

• Aquatic (gills), digestive tract

• Snails, octopus, clams

• Mollusks Video

Page 34: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylum Annelida

• Means “ringed” or segmented worm

• Digestive, nervous, circulatory systems

• Earthworms and leeches

Page 35: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylum Arthropoda

• Means “jointed foot”

• Have an exoskeleton (exterior)

• Segmented body, lungs/tracheae

• Insects (flies, wasps, beetles), crustaceans (lobster, shrimp), arachnids (spiders)

Page 36: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylum Echinodermata

• Means “spiny skinned”

• Starfish, sea urchin, brittle star

• Spiny skin and radial symmetry (5 arms coming out from center)

Page 37: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylum Chordata

• Means “having a chord”

• Have a backbone

• Have 9 systems (circulatory, nervous, skeletal, digestive, respiratory, etc.)

• Amphibians, Fish, Reptiles, Birds, Mammals

Page 38: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification
Page 39: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Great Pictures Phyla Quiz

• Phyla Quiz

• Match organism to phylum

Page 40: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

What kingdom are you?

Page 41: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Classification

• How do you organize all the 14 million species?

Approximately 1.5 million species have so far been identified and scientifically Described.

Page 42: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification
Page 43: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778)

• Father of Taxonomy

• His system for naming, ranking, and classifying organisms is still in wide use today

Page 44: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

ClassificationLinnaeus’ Botanical Garden

Page 45: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Taxons (Groups for Classification)

• KingdomPhylum

Class

Order

Family

Genus

Species

Page 47: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Ever hear of E. coli?

• It is the abbreviated form of the scientific name ofEscherichia coli

Page 48: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

T. rex.

• Tyrannosaurus rex

• Often lazy scientists just abbreviate the Genus with just a letter.

Page 49: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

How do you write a scientific name?

• First letter of Genus is capitalized and the rest is lower case

• Either underline the genus and species OR italicize the genus and species

• Written in Latin

Page 50: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Scientific Name

•Genus and species

•Homo sapiens

•Homo sapiens

Page 51: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

“binomial nomenclature"

• Two name-name• Genus and Species

Acris crepitans Northern Cricket Frog“repititious clicking call”

Acer saccharum Common NameSugar maple

Page 52: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Pine Trees• Sugar pine

= Pinus lambertiana

• ponderosa pine = Pinus ponderosa

• Whitebark pine =Pinus albicaulis

Page 53: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Phylogeny

• Evolutionary Relationship among organisms

Page 54: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Derived Characters

Trait that appears in older organisms, but not in recent parts of the lineage

Page 55: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification
Page 56: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Using Classification Keys Labs

• 1. Make a classification key for candy– Work in lab groups of

4– Write key on large

paper– End with

identification of single pieces of candy

1.Bark on trunk smooth ...................2 Bark on trunk rough ........................3   

2.Bark mostly white ........................4 Bark other colors ............................7

Page 57: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Cladogram Styles

Page 58: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

How to Build a Cladogram

• http://ccl.northwestern.edu/simevolution/obonu/cladograms/Open-This-File.swf

Page 59: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Dichotomous Key

organized set of couplets

Page 60: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

A dichotomous key

Work in couplets: pick from two choices

Page 61: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Keep dividing into two groups

Page 62: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Continue until you end with identifying each individual thing

Page 63: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Or you can do it this way

Page 64: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Cladogram

• A diagram that shows the evolutionary relationships among a group of organisms

Page 66: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

• Dichotomous Key Outline (get handout)

• So that you will recognize how to use a Dichotomous Key the first thing to do is choose the animal you want to classify:

Page 67: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Key a Classmate

(using various human or non-human characteristics)The following key is an example: • 1. Sex female---2

1. Sex male---52. Hair color red---Susan2. Hair color brown or blond---3

3. Hair color blonde---Jane3. Hair color brown---4

4. Glasses worn---Donna4. Glasses not worn---Linda

5. Pants jeans---Caleb5. Pants slacks---6

6. Hair color black--James6. Hair color brown--Zach

Page 68: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Another One

LEAF Tree ID Key (CLICK Here)

I've got my leaf, let's get started! Click here

Page 69: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Ohio Tree Links

• What Tree Is It? HOME

Page 70: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

Common Leaf Descriptions

Page 71: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

LINKS

• Tree of Life Web Project (includes interactive diagram)– First click on DOMAINS: Archaea, Bacteria, or

Eukarya– Then click on KINGDOMS– Then Scroll Down and click on the PHYLUM

in the reading– Click on CLASS in the reading