levels of taxonomic classification
domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species
six kingdoms
eubacteria, archaebacteria, protista, fungi, plantae, animalia
three domains
archaea, bacteria, eukarya (eukaryota)
kingdoms of eukarya
protista, fungi, animalia, plantae
kingdoms of bacteria
eubacteria
kingdoms of archaea
archaebacteria
kingdom: eubacteria
domain: bacteria
cell wall made of peptidoglycan (gram +: more peptidoglycan, gram -: drug resistance & pathogenic)
ex. cyanobacteria - contain chlorophyll and photosynthetic abilities
kingdom: archaebacteria
domain: archaea
cell wall made of polysaccharides
-bacteria that can live in extreme conditions
kingdom: protista
domain: eukarya
basically all types
-primarily unicellular eukaryotes, but some are colonial/ display multicellularity
-movement through pseudopods, flagellum, cilia
-nucleus & membrane-bound organelles
-autotrophic/ heterotrophic
-phyla are divided into three main groups: protozoa (animal-like), algae (plant-like), and fungus-like protists
-ex. protozoa, algae, amoeba
kingdom: fungi
domain: eukarya mostly multicellular, eukaryotic heterotrophs that absorb nutrients from environment (extracellular digestion so hydrolyzed food can diffuse in) -decomposers -filamentous structure -multinucleate -no digestive system; absorptive feeding -cell walls made of chitin -reproduce sexually/asexually ex. lichen, yeast (unicellular), mold, mushrooms
kingdom: animalia
domain: eukarya
- multicellular, mobile, heterotrophic eukaryotes
- reproduce sexually with fertilization
- classified by embryonic development and anatomical features
kingdom: plantae
domain: eukarya
- multicellular autotrophic eukaryotic cells
- non-motile
- cell walls made of cellulose
- carry out photosynthesis through chlorophyll a, b, and carotenoids
- store carbohydrates as starch in roots
- reproduce sexually through alteration of generations
- vascular and nonvascular
domain: archaea
domain: bacteria
domain: eukarya
- nucleus and membrane-bound organelles, linear DNA
archaea: extreme halophiles
archaebacteria that thrive in environments with high salt concentration
archaea: extreme thermophiles
archaebacteria that thrive in environments with high temperatures
plant and some algae life cycle
alternation of generations
-multicellular diploid sporophyte undergoes meiosis to produce haploid spores. spores divide mitotically, forming multicellular haploid gametophytes. Through mitosis, gametophytes form gametes, in which fertilization results in diploid zygote that will develop into next sporophyte generation.
fungi and protists life cycle
diploid zygote undergoes meiosis, forming haploid cells that develop into unicellular descendants or haploid multicellular adult organisms. the haploid organism carries out further mitosis, producing cells that will develop into gametes.
phylum: porifera
8 phyla of kingdom animalia
Porifera (sponges), echinodermata (echinoderms), cnidaria (coelenterates), platyhelminthes (flatworms), annelida (segmented worms), mollusca (mollusks), arthropoda (arthropods), chordata (chordates)
phylum: echinodermata
phylum: cnidaria
coelenterates
phylum: platyhelminthes
flatworms
ex. planaria (nonparasitic), flukes & tapeworms (parasitic)
- bilateral symmetry
- three cell layers
- moderate cephalization (formation of head and brain through concentration of sense organs, nervous control)
- one opening for digestion, no organ systems
- diffusion with environment (gas & food exchange)
- protostomes (animals whose embryos develop mouth first)