Classification
The process of sorting living things into groups of similar organisms. It reflects how closely related they are and evolutionary relationships
Taxonomy
The study of the principles behind classification
- study of the differences between species (physical + genetic)
Phylogeny
The study of the evolutionary relationships between organisms, the study of how closely related they are
Why we classify organisms
8 taxonomic groups used for classification
Domain Largest
Kingdom
Phylum
Class Decreasing variation
Order
Family
Genus
Species Smallest
Binomial nomenclature
2 terms are used to denote a species of living organism
First once indicates genus, and the second one is species
E.g. Homo sapiens
Morphological features
Heterotrophic feeders
Eat and digest other organisms
Autotrophic feeders
Use photosynthesis to make own food
Saprotrophic feeders
Digest other organisms outside the body (using enzymes)
How many kingdoms are there
5
What are the 5 kingdoms
Characteristics of each kingdom
Animals- eukaryotes, multicellular, heterotrophic feeders, no cell walls, fertilised eggs develop into blastula (multicellular organisms), move freely
Plants- eurkaryotes, multicellular, autotrophic feeders, cellulose cell wall, contain chlorophyll
Fungi- eukaryotes, mostly multicellular (yeast-unicellular), Saprotrophic feeders, chitin cell wall, reproduce with spores, mycelium made of hyphae
Protoctista- eukaryotes, mostly single celled, autotrophic & Saprotrophic feeders, variety of different forms- don’t fit into any other kingdoms, display features of multiple kingdoms
Prokaryotes- no membrane bound organelles, smaller 70s ribosomes, smaller than eukaryotes, may be free living or parasitic
no nucleus- loop of naked DNA, no histones
How many domains are there
3
What are the 3 domains
Characteristics of each domain
Bacteria
- 70s ribosomes
- no nucleus- prokaryotic
Archaea
- prokaryotes- have no nucleus
- extremophile
Eukarya
- multicellular
- animal, fungi, plants
- protists with cilia, protists with flagella
Who introduced 6 kingdoms classification and what did they add
Carl Woese
- split prokaryotes into archaebacteria and eubacteria
Standard deviation
• used to measure how spread out a set of data is
• The higher the standard deviation, the more spread out the data is
• E.g. populations with large amounts of variation will have a large standard deviation
high SD= wider curve
low SD= tall curve
Standard deviation formula
Phylogeny
The evolutionary relationships between organisms
Advantages of phylogenic trees
Disadvantages of phylogenetic trees
Evidence for evolution (4)
Evidence: palaeontology