chapter 1: classifying organisms (aka as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

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Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

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Page 1: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms

(AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Page 2: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Basically, Ch. 1 is:

• History of naming organisms• Important people who named organisms• Different ways to think about naming• Somewhat uninteresting……

Page 3: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Major points in Ch. 1:

• How we name organisms has a long history.• People to know:• Linnaeus: invented the modern naming

system• Tournefort: invented the concept of the genus

level of classification (genus = group of related species).

Page 4: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Grouping organisms:

• Modern way: cladistics.• Cladistics tries to be extremely objective

(neutral) when comparing traits of organisms.• Uses measurable/quantifiable traits only;

examples include:– DNA– Morphological & Anatomical traits

Page 5: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Cladistics

• Groups related organisms into ‘clades’

Page 6: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Traits

• Traits are based on whether they are common (=plesiomorphic) or rare (apomorphic).

• Common traits are considered ancestral or primitive

• Rare traits are considered more newly evolved, and thus aren’t as common

Page 7: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Common Traits:

• Common traits are shared, and thus, are supposed to represent the ancestral condition, for example, most primates have 24 pairs of chromosomes, but humans have 23 pairs

• Thus, 24 pairs of chromosomes is common for primates

Page 8: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Rare traits:

• In humans, the #2 chromosome is a fused chromosome consisting of the #2 and #3 chromosome in other primates.

• Thus, a fused #2 chromosome is rare in primates, and only the human line has it.

Page 9: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Humans did not evolve from chimpanzees. Humans and chimpanzees are evolutionary cousins and share a recent common ancestor that was neither chimpanzee nor human.

Humans are not "higher" or "more evolved" than other living lineages. Since our lineages split, humans and chimpanzees have each evolved traits unique to their own lineages.

Page 10: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Non-flowering plants: Liverworts

• DNA shows oldest land plant group, maybe 475my old!

Page 11: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Non-flowering plants: Mosses

• Very old group, maybe 400my old

Page 12: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Non-flowering plants: Horsetails

• Also old, 350my?• Used to be quite tall,

firsts forests on land

Page 13: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Horsetail forests

Page 14: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)
Page 15: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Non-flowering plants: Ferns

• About 320my old

Page 16: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Non-flowering plants: Conifers

• Produces seeds protected in cones

• Also called gymnosperms (‘naked’ ‘seeds’) because seeds not protected by fruits

Page 17: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)
Page 18: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Conifers

• About 600 species of conifers• About 1/3 are pine species (nearly 250)

Page 19: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Conifers• Conifer=‘to bear cones’• Phylum Pinophyta (old

name: Coniferophyta)• Evolved a bit later than ferns• Major conifers: pine, spruce,

fir, cypress, junipers, etc.• Either needle-leaved or

scale-leaved• Adapted for cold & dry env.

Page 20: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Needle leaves

Page 21: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Conifers

• Contain the largest (most massive) organisms on Earth: redwoods

• the tallest organisms: redwoods• and the oldest: bristlecone pines

Page 22: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)
Page 23: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)
Page 24: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Common needle-leaved conifers in our

area:

• 1. Firs a. Grand fir (Abies

grandis): needle-leaves; wider leaves than Douglas fir and are notched at tips. 2 whitish bands on leaf bottom. Cones point up. Can reach nearly 300 feet!

Page 25: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Common needle-leaved conifers in our area:

• 1. Firs (cont.)b. Douglas fir (not a

true fir) Pseudotsuga menziessi; needle leaves; main timber tree west of the Cascades. Cones hang down, have 3-pronged bracts on cones. Can get nearly 300 feet tall.

Page 26: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)
Page 27: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Common needle-leaved conifers in our area:

• 2. Spruces:a. Sitka Spruce

(Picea sitchensis): rare in our area.

Page 28: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Common needle-leaved conifers in our area:

• 3. Pines--Usually only 2 species here:a. Lodgepole pine

(Pinus contorta)—not too common here.

b. Western white pine (Pinus ponderosa)—5 needled. Long needles.

Page 29: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Common needle-leaved conifers in our area:

• 4. Hemlocks:a. Western Hemlock

(Tsuga heterophylla) thin needle-leaves, rounded at tips. Short and longer leaves occur together. Topmost branch droops. Cones hang down.

Page 30: Chapter 1: Classifying Organisms (AKA as ‘read this chapter if you have insomnia’!)

Common scale-leaved conifers in our area:

• Cedars (not real cedars):a. Western Red Cedar

(Thuja plicata)—can grow up to 230 feet tall! Branches tend to droop. Two sets of alternating scales. Cones point upward if seeds are present, downward once seeds are gone.