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Classification Introduction

Published on Nov 19, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Classification Introduction

Objectives

  • Outline the Linnaean classification system
  • Describe a domain
  • Describe phylogenetic classification
  • Outline the evolution & classification of prokaryotes
  • Describe a virus

Taxonomy is the science of classifying organisms.

Carolus Linnaeus

  • Swedish botanist in 1700s
  • Tried to classify all living things
  • Groupings by physical traits
  • Known as "father of taxonomy"
  • Developed binomial nomenclature

Linnaean System

  • Hierarchy of groupings called taxa
  • Kingdom most inclusive
  • Species most exclusive

Since Linnaeus's time, domain has been added.

Domains

  • Bacteria
  • Archaea
  • Eukaryota (animal, plant, fungus, protist)

After Darwin, scientists looked for ways to classify based on phylogeny, the evolutionary history of a group of related organisms.

One way to do this is to use a clade, a group of organisms that includes an ancestor and all its descendents.

Clades are based on cladistics, a method of comparing traits to determine ancestor-descendent relationships.

Clades are represented by cladograms.

Prokaryotic Domains

Domain Bacteria

  • Cyanobacteria contain cholorophyll
  • Classified as gram-positive or -negative

Domain Archaea

  • Little is known
  • Hard to grow in lab
  • First discovered in extreme environments
  • Now known to live almost everywhere
  • Especially abundant in plankton

Prokaryote Metabolism

Metabolism types

  • Heterotrophs - use organic compounds
  • Autotrophs - use carbon dioxide
  • Phototrophic
  • Chemotrophic

Virus Characteristics

If a virus were the length of three soccer balls, a prokaryote would be the size of a soccer field.

Viruses

  • are not cells.
  • lack cell membranes and organelles.
  • can't make proteins or reproduce on their own.
  • must depend on a host cell.
  • ARE NOT LIVING THINGS.

Viruses

  • are strands of genetic material within a capsid.
  • infect cells, using them to make proteins and reproduce.

A phage is a virus that infects prokaryotes.