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Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla Grouping Organisms And Classification

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Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla. Grouping Organisms And Classification. Age of Life on Earth. 3.5 billion years ago (prokaryotes came first) 1.5 million species have been named by classification system called taxonomy (to name and group organisms in a logical manner). Domains. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Grouping Organisms

And Classification

Page 2: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Age of Life on Earth

• 3.5 billion years ago (prokaryotes came first)

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

Page 3: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Taxonomy

• Discipline where scientists classify organisms and assign them a scientific name

Page 4: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Domains3 largest classification groups

Archaea

Eubacteria

Eukarya

Page 5: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla
Page 6: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

THREE Domains…Kingdoms

Eubacteria Archaea EukaryaProkaryotic (no true nucleus) (true nucleus)

(true bacteria) (extreme (protists

bacteria) fungi

plants

animals)

Page 7: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

TAXONS

• Domain (3): Archaea, Eubacteria, Eukarya

• Kingdom (6)

• Phylum

• Class

• Order

• Family

• Genus

• Species

Page 8: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

TAXONS: levels of taxonomy

Kingdom

Phylum

Class

Order

Family

Genus

Species

King Phillip Came Over

From

Great Spain

memorize

Page 9: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

LINNAEAN CLASSIFICATION OF HUMANS

Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: Chordata

Class: MammaliaOrder: Primates

Family: HominidaeGenus: Homo

Species: sapiensThis is the one organism you need to memorize.

Page 10: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla
Page 11: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Ever hear of E. coli?

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

Page 12: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

T. rex.

• Tyrannosaurus rex

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

Page 13: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

binomial nomenclature

• is the two part name of

organisms.

two terms: the genus name and the species

Page 14: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

• Example: Common name = sugar pineScientific name = Pinus lambertiana

• ponderosa pine: Pinus ponderosalodgepole pine: Pinus contorta

Page 15: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Some Unusual Names

• Calponea harrisonfordi (spider) Named after Harrison Ford in appreciation of his narrating a documentary.

• Lalapa lusa (tiphiid wasp)

• Phytophthora infestans (fungus of the Irish potato famine)

• Tabanus nippontucki (horse fly)

• Gelae baen (fungus beetle)

Page 16: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Escherichia coli or Escherichia coli

• Genus first letter is CAPITALIZED (written first)

• Species is

lower case• Written in Latin• Italicized OR underlined

Page 17: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

How do you write scientific name for humans?

• Homo sapiens

• OR

• Homo sapiens

Page 18: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Carolus Linnaeus: devised the binomial nomenclature system

1707-1778• Studied medicine

• Disappointed parents that he did not enter priesthood

• Studied plants to make medicines

Our Hero

Page 19: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Linnaeus’ Botanical GardenClassification Chart of Primates

Page 20: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Where do the name come from?

• Often they are Latin words, but they may also come from Ancient Greek, from a place, from a person (preferably a naturalist), a name from a local language, etc. In fact, taxonomists come up with specific descriptors from a variety of sources, including inside-jokes and puns.

Page 21: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Some Unusual Names

• Calponea harrisonfordi (spider) Named after Harrison Ford in appreciation of his narrating a documentary.

• Lalapa lusa (tiphiid wasp)

• Phytophthora infestans (fungus of the Irish potato famine)

• Tabanus nippontucki (horse fly)

• Gelae baen (fungus beetle)

Page 22: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Dichotomous Key

• An identification key, also known as a dichotomous key, is a method of deducing the correct species assignment of a living thing.

Page 23: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Two Ways to Make the Key

Page 24: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

• "Dichotomous" means "divided into two parts". Therefore, dichotomous keys always give two choices in each step.

Page 25: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

• 1 A. Metal....................................................go to 2 • 1 B. Paper....................................................go to 5 • 2 A. Brown (copper)........................................penny • 2 B. Silver....................................................go to 3 • 3 A. Smooth edge...........................................nickel. • 3 B. Ridges around the edge...............................go to 4 • 4 A. Torch on back..........................................dime • 4 B. Eagle on back...........................................quarter • 5 A. Number 1 in the corners...............................$1 bill • 5 B. Number 2 in the corners...............................$2 bill

Page 26: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

EEK! - Dichotomous Tree Key (click Here)

Page 27: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

All Tree Leaves

• Needles Broadleaf

Can use tree guides.

Avoid using subjective terms: colors, big/small (numbers are better)

Page 28: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Tips

• Better if the choice a positive one - something "is" instead of "is not".

• If possible, start both choices of a pair with the same word.

• 1. a. leaves with lobes

• b. leaves single (no lobes)

Page 29: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Some common terms

• lobed and one entire

» serrated

Page 30: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Some examples

• Round, serrated Base not even

• Teeth wide, sunken veins

Page 31: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Examples

• Four pointed lobes Leaflets across

• Deep lobes

almost to rib

Page 32: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Some even have more than one shape on the same tree

Page 33: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Get Handout: Good Tips• Make a dichotomous key of 15 leaves• One key/lab table• Use 4 feet of white paper• Use measurements (5 cm) rather than terms

like "large" and "small".• Use terms others would understand. • Always make two choices.• Leaves will be taped at the end of the

division.

Page 34: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Comparing Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic

• PROKARYOTIC

• No true nucleus (called a nucleoid)

• smaller

• EUKARYOTIC

• True nucleus with a membrane

• larger

• Comparing prokaryotic and eukaryotic

Page 35: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Six Kingdoms: Get Handout

Page 36: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Two Domains are Prokaryotic• Genetic material NOT in a nucleus

(called a nucleoid instead)• INCLUDES:

1.Eubacteria –true bacteria

2. Archaea – extreme bacteria

(sometimes “archaebacteria”)• Bacteria Youtube (Archaea and Eubacteria) (2:33)

Page 37: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Kingdom: Archaeaor Archaebacteria)

• Prokaryotic –no true nucleus• Cell walls with no peptidoglycan

(see next slide) • Unicellular – one celled• Live in most extreme

environments• Discovering Archaea (3:24) FYI: Discovered

1977

Page 38: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

What is peptidoglycan?

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

Page 39: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Kingdom: Archaea

• Thermophiles –love heat

• Psychrophiles –cold-loving

• Acidophiles –love acidic environments

• Halophiles-love salty

• Barophiles-high pressure (ocean bottom)

Page 40: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Archaea Examples

• Thermus aquaticus (Extremophiles Youtube)

Found in hot springs

Page 41: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Archaea ExamplesA-thermophile

B-halophile

C-halophile

D-carbonatphile

E-halophile

F-calcium carbonatphile-What are extremophiles? (54 secs)

-Extremophiles (1:25)

-Bozeman Biology: Archaea (7:16)

Page 42: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Kingdom: EUBACTERIA (true bacteria)

• Prokaryotic – no true

nucleus (just a nucleoid)

• Cell wall with peptidoglycan

• Unicellular –one-celled

• Diverse environments and metabolism

Page 43: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Eubacteria (Common)

• Staphylococcus

• Anthracis bacillus

• Escherichia coli

• Streptococcus

Page 44: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Eubacteria Examples

• Neisseria gonorrhoeae

• Staphylococcus aureus(skin)

Page 45: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Domain: Eukarya

HAVE A NUCLEUS (membrane around the Genetic material)Includes 4 Kingdoms:

Protists FungiAnimalsPlants

Page 46: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Kingdom: Protista

• Eukaryotic – DO have a nucleus

• Usually unicellular• Varied cell walls• (Plant-like, animal-

like, fungus –like)

Page 47: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

PROTISTA

• Plant-like protists (have chlorophyll)

• Animal-like protists (Move)

Fungus-like protists(slime molds move like

amoeba, decomposer)

Page 48: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Protista ExamplesProtist Youtube

Euglena • Paramecium

Volvox(colonial)

Stentor

Page 49: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Kingdom: FUNGI

• Eukaryotic• Cell walls of

chitin –stiffener

• Can be multicellular or unicellular

Page 50: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Fungi

• Yeast (unicellular fungi)

• Can you see the budding?

Page 51: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

More Fungi

• Bracket Fungus Toenail Fungus

Bread mold

Page 52: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

More Fungi

• Penicillium Black Mold

Hot dog mold

Page 53: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Kingdom: Plantae• Eukaryotic• Cell wall made of cellulose• Multicellular –more than one

cell• Autotrophic –photosynthetic

– make their own food

Page 54: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

What is cellulose?

Stiff, interlocking fibers in plants

Page 55: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Examples:

Page 56: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Kingdom: Animalia

• Eukaryotic

• No cell wall

• Multicellular

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

Page 57: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

Animalia

Page 58: Domains, Kingdoms, and Phyla

What kingdom are you?