What is classification?
the process by which living organisms are sorted into groups based on similar features
Why are organisms classified?
What is the taxonomic heirarchy?
(Domain) Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
What is a species?
a group of living organisms that can interbreed to produce fertile offspring
What is the binomial nomenculture?
method of naming species
What are the advantages of binomial nomenculture?
- species has the same name in all languages (unlike common names)
What are the five kingdoms?
Prokaryotae Protoctista Fungi Plantae Animalia
What are the features of the Prokaryotae kingdom?
What are the features of the Protoctista kingdom?
What are the features of the Fungi kingdom?
What are the features of the Plantae kingdom?
What are the features of the Animalia kingdom?
What are autotrophic feeders and which kingdoms are they?
organisms that synthesis the substances they need (ie. by photosynthesis)
-Plantae, some Prokaryotae, some Protoctista
What are heterotrophic feeders and which kingdoms are they?
organisms that feed on other organisms (ie. ingestion)
-Animalia, some Protoctista
What are saphrophic feeders and which kingdoms are they?
organisms that feed on decaying matter
-Fungi
What is the current classification system?
the three domain system
-3 domains + 6 kingdoms
What is phylogeny?
the evolutionary relationships between organisms
What do phylogenetic trees show?
evolutionary relationships
What are the advantages of phylogeny?
- produces a continuous tree (classification only has discrete taxonomic groups)
What is evolution?
the process by which organisms change over millions of years as a result of natural selection
What happens in natural selection?
What is a selection pressure?
a factor that affects an organism’s changes of survival or reproductive success
eg. competition (mate/food), disease, predation
What evidence for evolution is there?
What is variation?
differences in characteristics between organisms