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Classification New

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Classification New

Uploaded by

Haris Ali
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Life for biologist

 Biology is the study of living organisms.


 Biology is the way of understanding nature
 Biologists deal with living part of nature along
with non-living things that affect living things in
any way
 For biologists life is set of characteristics
 On basis of these characteristics living
organism can be distinguish from non-living
 Any object possessing all these characteristics
simultaneously can be declared as living thing
For something to be alive it needs to perform all seven functions of living
things
Growth: It is the ability to increase in size, dry mass and number of cells
using materials absorbed from the environment.

Movement: Ability to change position of part or of the whole body


Most organisms are able to move their whole body even plants can
shift their stem towards the sunlight and their roots move towards
healthy soil.
Respiration: Breakdown of food inside a living cell to release energy &
use it in vital processes for survival.

Excretion: All organisms produce harmful products, metabolic waste,


toxic materials & substance as a result of metabolic reactions. Excretion
is removal of such substances from body
Reproduction: Ability to produce new organism of same species as
themselves either sexually involving 2 parents or asexually involving
single parent
Sensitivity: Ability to detect and respond to a change (stimulus)in
external or internal environment.
Nutrition: Intake of food material from the environment and use them
to provide energy or materials for growth repair, to make new cells
It is of 2 types:
Autotrophic nutrition: Organisms that make their own food such as
plants.
Heterotrophic nutrition: Organisms that need readymade food
including herbivores, carnivores & omnivores.
Heterotrophic may be saprophytic or parasitic.
Classifying organisms
Classification is sorting organisms into groups on the basis of
features they share, their structural similarities & differences so that
we can make comparison between them.
Over 1.4 million different species of organisms on the earth
showing great diversity
Biologists look for patterns, to explain great diversity of life on Earth
• Artificially we can classify on the basis of properties useful
• Historically, similarity in their physical characteristics
• Modern classification uses a variety of techniques including
genetic analysis
• Most accurate system of classification use DNA base
sequences
Need or classification
Biologists Classify organisms for:
 Ease in studies
 Learn different kinds of plants & animals, their features,
similarities & differences
 Identification & reference of living organisms as well as
 Understanding the diversity of living organisms.
 Reflects evolutionary relationship between organisms, so we
can trace possible origin of organism
The science of naming,
describing and classifying
organisms is known as
Taxonomy
In Natural System of
Classification organisms
are classified into groups
known as Texon

Texa above is more general


than the one below it

Resemblance among the


organisms increases as
we Go down the scale
Carolus Linnaeus invented a
Natural System of We can easily separate
Classification a system different genera but its
more difficult to separate
Kingdom means Many organisms, few features in common different species
Species means Individual organisms, many features in common
Species
Specie is a basic unit of classification
It is an independent evolutionary
unit that possess its own distinct
structural, ecological & behavioral
characteristics
Specie is a group of organisms that
share (many) similar features
Can interbreed freely with each other
and produce fertile viable offspring
Are reproductively isolated from all
other such groups in nature
Different species don't exchange
genes between them
Construct and use dichotomous keys
 Dichotomous means dividing into two on the basis of
identifiable features
 Dichotomous Keys are used to identify species or
organism whose name is not known.
 A key will usually ask pair of questions based on easily
identifiable features of an organism, to which there are
only two answers, you have to choose between them.
 Each choice you make can leads you to another pair of
description until you end up with the name of organism
taking one organism at a time.
 This can be presented as a table of questions, or as a
branching tree of questions.
 While constructing a key decisions should be made by
looking at one organism only
 Comparative or subjective descriptions (e-g taller, larger)
are not suitable.
The diagram shows a bird that lives near rivers.
Use the key to identify the bird shown in the diagram.
1 toes joined by a flap of skin ........................... go to 2
toes separate ................................................. A heron
2 beak as long or longer than the head ............ go to 3
beak not as long as the head ........................ B little grebe
3 top of head black ........................................... C avocet
top of head white ........................................... D mute swan

The diagram shows a leaf. Use the key to identify the plant to which the leaf belongs.
Binomial Nomenclature
It is the way or system to give systematic name to organism
Need for Nomenclature:
• Various regions had different names for the same plant or animal e-g
[piyaz, ganda, vassal, onion] --- [amaltas, golden shower, purging cassia]
• Various region had same name for different plant or animal e-g blue bells
plants with bell shaped flower, black bird for crow as well as
for raven
• To avoid confusion & differences in languages it allows scientists to
accurately identify individual species
Species are scientifically named by two names in Latin
showing genus and species.
The first name refers to the genus is the generic name always begin with the
capital letter, both must be italic and underlined
While the second name is the species name begins with small letter e.g.
WOLF (Cannis lupus), ONION (Allium cepa), AMALTAS (Cassia fistula)
Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes
Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes
Cells are fundamentally categorized by:-
Prokaryotes E.g. Bacteria
The smallest and simplest type of cells.
Have no true nucleus and no membrane-bounded organelles.
Their Genome consists of single chromosome.
They reproduce asexually -- basically by mitosis
Eukaryotes
Are complex in structure.
Have true nucleus and membrane-bounded organelles.
Their Genome consists of numerous chromosomes.
They reproduce Asexually and sexually-- by mitosis and meiosis
Five Kingdoms
Five kingdoms of organisms are basically recognize by biologists on the basis of:-
 Presence of nucleus
 How do the get food
 Unicellular or multicellular
Let’s discuss each kingdom in brief −
Monera − Prokaryotic organisms, comprises the unicellular organisms, e.g. bacteria.
Protista − Eukaryotic organisms similar to monera (unicellular), but more developed and
complex.
Fungi − Eukaryotic organisms such as yeasts, molds, and mushrooms. Do not make their
food, they are basically parasites & saprophytes
Plantae − Eukaryotic organisms from smallest (algae) to the largest (Pine, Eucalyptus
trees, etc.) are studied under this kingdom.
.Animalia − Eukaryotic organisms, includes all the multicellular organisms.
Biologists don’t include virus since it doesn’t obey some characteristics of life.
The virus are the simplest of all life forms and are
viruses
considered living only when they are inside living cells
 Not classified in any of five kingdoms, do not
regard them as truly living as they:-
 Do not show characteristics of living organisms.
 Can’t do anything until they get inside a living cell
 Can’t move, feed, respire, excrete, show
sensitivity, grow or reproduce on their own
 Has a simple structure --not made of cells, don’t
have any protoplasm, just contain nucleic acid i-e
DNA or RNA or both surrounded by a protein coat
which often has spikes
 Inability to reproduce is one of the most important
characteristic that distinguishes them from living org
 Shape may be spherical—influenza or rod shape —
TMV or tadpole (polyhedral) shape – bacteriophage
 Size <300 nm —50x smaller than a viruses
bacterium can only be seen by electron
microscope
 Simple method of reproduction -- can’t
reproduce by their own, only able to
replicate inside a living host cell by
taking over host biosynthetic machinery &
use it for their own metabolism, to make
their copies hence causing host cell to burst
releasing viruses to infect new healthy cells.
 They are host specific
 Can only be destroyed by antibodies
produced by our body
Disadvantages
Since all are parasitic, so viruses
pathogens that cause disease e-g
influenza, HIV, measles, polio,
chicken pox, herpes, dengue AIDS.
Some cause disease to plants & are
responsible for significant reductions
in crop yields.
Advantages Can be used in researches in
lab, Biological control, Genetic
engineering
Simplest of truly living unicellular organisms Prokaryotes
 Exist either single or in chains or in groups
 Size in the range of 0.5—5 um, not > 0.01mm
 Found every where in food, soil, air, water
 Structure: cell has cytoplasm, ribosomes & cell
membrane surrounded by cell wall [made of
peptidoglycan]
 Some of them are enveloped by a thin layer of
slime capsule---protect them from being drying
out & being engulfed or as a store for nutrition
 Does not have mitochondria and a true nucleus,
genetic material consist of single loop of
chromosome/single strand DNA embedded in
cytoplasm, not surrounded by nuclear envelope
 Plasmids---Smaller DNA rings also present in
cytoplasm, that has nothing to do with growth & bacteria, blue-green algae
metabolism of cell .
 Shape may be:- bacteria
spherical- cocci or rod shaped—bacilli or

vibrio comma shaped or spiral shaped—Spirilla.


 Most are non-motile, some are motile move with
the help of thread like flagella or hair like cilia
 Some respire aerobically, some anaerobically &
some both aerobically and anaerobically
 Some are harmful--pathogenic cause diseases,
some reduces soil fertility e-g denitrifying bacteria
 Some are useful-- involved in nitrogen fixation,
fermenting food products, used in the industrial
production of insulin & antibiotics
 Can be destroyed by using antibiotics however
some became resistant because of misuse of
drugs
Bacteria Nutrition & Reproduction
 May be autotrophs make their own food
either by using sunlight photoautotrophs or
chemicals chemoautotrophs
 May be heterotrophs—saprophytes---
feeding on dead organic matter or parasites
—causing disease in animals & plants
 Store food as fat droplets
 Reproduce asexually or sexually
 Under unfavorable conditions form spores—
thick walled , resistant to cold, heat, drought
—germinate on approach of favorable
conditions
Include a mixed collection of organisms, are most Protoctists
elaborate & diverse of all cells
 Most are microscopic unicellular, but some are
true multicellular(seaweeds)
 Size of single cells may vary from microscopic to
thousands of square meters (giant kelp)
 They all prefer aquatic or moist environments.
 All cells have a single or many nuclei, most have
mitochondria
 Some are plant like with chloroplast and cellulose cell
wall, while others are animal like without chloroplast
 Most are motile and move with cilia, flagella, or
pseudopodia
 Some respire aerobically some anaerobically
 Either reproduce asexually or sexually
Protoctists-- Nutrition
Some are
photoautotrophs
 While others are
heterotrophs
which either do
phagocytosis to
ingest organic
food substances
Some are
saprophytes
Some are
parasites
Phagocytosis in Amoeba
Fungi = Eukaryotes
May be
 unicellular, microscopic e-g yeast or
 multicellular (filamentous) e-g bread mould or
 much larger & visible to naked eye mushroom, toadstool
 Body of unicellular yeast comprised of large central
vacuole, cytoplasm, ribosomes, mitochondria, true
nucleus, cell membrane and cell wall
 Body of multicellular fungus made up of
microscopic branched threads called hyphae, which
forms a mesh called mycelium. Substratum is the
substance on which Mycelium grows
 Each hypha is made of many cells joined end to end
without intercellular cell wall, has Large central
vacuole, cell membrane, cytoplasm with many nuclei.
 Fungal cell wall is made up of chitin
 Respire both aerobically and anaerobically
unicellular yeast
nutrition &Reproduction
 They lack chlorophyll so Heterotrophs may
be:-
 Saprophytes -- do extracellular digestion and
are called decomposers as they release
inorganic from organic compounds to the soil
 Parasites live on living tissue of host e-g
toadstool on tree trunks or fungus causing
plant (potato blight) or animal disease
 Store food as glycogen
 Reproduce asexually by budding or by spores
which dispersed by rupture & wind or sexually

 Destroyed by antifungal
 Advantage:- Used in food, antibiotics,
decomposition, humus formation
 Disadvantage:- causing food decay, disease
 Green plants are Multicellular eukaryotic organisms
 May have different organs for anchorage, reproduction, Plants
support (some don’t have)
 Their cell consist of true nucleus, cytoplasm, cell
membrane, outer cellulose cell wall & a large central
vacuole
 Are autotrophs as have chlorophyll in chloroplast
 Are non-motile
 Store food in the form of starch.
 Reproduce asexually or sexually.
 Respire aerobically hence some living in marshes with
less O2 supply can respire anaerobically too
Criteria for classifying
Plants can be divided into:
plant kingdom is based
on:
 Plant body
 Vascular system
 Seed formation
Flowering Plants-- Angiosperms
 Plants with root stem and leaves
 Reproduce using flower and seeds
 Seeds produces inside ovary in the flower
According to the nature of seeds, seedlings & leaves they are divided into two groups:
Feature Monocotyledons Dicotyledons
Seed Seed containing one embryonic leaf Seed containing two embryonic leaves or
or cotyledon cotyledons
Leaves Long leaves containing parallel veins Broad leaves containing branched veins
Root Fibrous root system (adventitious) Usually have a tap root system [main root
roots growing directly from stem with lateral roots coming out of it]
Floral the parts of their flowers come in 3s the parts of their flowers come in 4s or 5s
parts
Vascular In stem Vascular bundles are In stem Vascular bundles are arranged in a
bundle scattered randomly ring
examples palms, orchids, grasses, corn, wheat, buttercups, dandelions, oak trees, rose,
iris sunflower, lily, hibiscus
Non seed producing plants --FERNS
 Grow in damp, shady places
 Like flowering plants, ferns have roots, stems
and leaves.
 Unlike flowering plants, ferns do not have
flowers or seeds; instead, they usually reproduce
asexually by tiny spores that produced in the
reproductive structures called sporangia [sori]
present on the underside of fronds [leaves]
 Major parts that Ferns have are:–
 the rhizome -- the underground stem
 the fronds---the leaves
 Rhizoids -- the roots
Fern are classified & identified on the basis of
these parts

Rhizoids -- the roots


Kingdom Animalia
 Multicellular, eukaryotic organisms and without
 Cells possess no cell walls, no plastids, no chlorophyll and no central
vacuoles but may have small vacuoles, all have mitochondria
 Most of them are actively free moving (except sponges & some coelentrates)
 Nutrition: Hetrotrophs-- feed on organic substances made by other living
organisms
 Most reproduce sexually
 Divide into two main groups:
 vertebrates ------ animals with backbone [vertebral column]
 invertebrates --- animals without backbone [vertebral column]
 Invertebrates further divided on the basis of whether they have legs or not
into:-
Nematodes, Annelids, Molluscs and Arthropods
 Vertebrates further divided into:-
Fish, Amphibians, reptiles, Birds and Mammals
Vertebrates vs Invertebrates
Invertebrates---Arthropods
 More kind of Arthropods than all other kind of animals put
together
 All have a waterproof exoskeleton that is made of chitin on
the outside of body, supporting their bodies and allow them
to live on land without drying out.
 Have segmented body to which jointed appendages are
attached in pairs-----several pair of jointed legs
 Arthropods are further classified on the basis of number of
legs & antennae into:-
insects, crustaceans, arachnids and myriapods
Insects---Arthropods
 Body segment: 3 body segments: head,
thorax, abdomen
 Jointed legs: 3 pairs(6 total)
 Antennae: 1 pair
 Wings : Two pair of wings [one or both may
be vestigial]
 Eyes: Compound & simple eyes
 Breathing: Breathe through tubes called
tracheae. Take air in through holes on the
outside of their bodies called spiracles. An
insect can open and close its spiracles by
using certain muscles
 Adaptation-- Can camouflage & live on all
food materials.
E-g -- Bees, butterflies, locust
crustaceans---Arthropods
 Body segment: 2 body segments:
cephalothorax & abdomen
 Jointed legs: More than 4 pairs of jointed
limbs, each with 2 branches
 Antennae: 2 pairs which are sensitive to
touch & chemicals
 Wings : None
 Eyes: 1 pair of Compound eyes
 Breathing: Breathe through Gills
 7 or more pairs of appendages for feeding,
swimming, walking, respiration & reproduction
E-g Crabs, lobsters, shrimps
Arachnids---Arthropods
 Body segment: 2 body segments:
cephalothorax & abdomen
 Jointed legs: 4 pairs(8 total)
 Antennae: Don’t have antennae. Instead,
these have 2 additional pairs of appendages.
 Wings : None
 Eyes: Simple eyes
 Breathing: To adapt living on land, internal
breathing systems like trachea or book lung
 Several are venomous, release venom from
special glands to kill prey.
 Several are parasite, cause disease
 Usually lay eggs. However Scorpions give
birth to live young.
myriapods---Arthropods
 Body segment: 2 segments --head and trunk
The trunk is elongated with many segments
 Jointed legs: Many pair of legs --1 or 2 pairs
on each segment
 Antennae: 1 pair on head
 Wings : None
 Eyes: Simple eyes
 Breathing: through tracheal system
 Adaptations: Mandibles (lower jaw) and
maxillae (upper jaw)
E-g Millipedes, centipedes
mammals---vertebrates
Most familiar vertebrate found in Land, water, air
 Give birth to young ones except Duck billed
Platypus and Echidna, but it is not distinctive
feature as many fish (guppies) and reptiles (snakes,
lizards) also give birth to young ones
 Most distinctive feature is their mode of
reproduction & care of child, only they have uterus
in which baby develop and attached to mother by
placenta, only they have mammary glands that
produce milk to feed their young ones
 Have skin with hair and sweat glands
 Have 4 limbs, 4 kinds of teeth, 4 Chambers of heart,
diaphragm and outer ear pinna
 They are Warm blooded (endothermic)
birds---vertebrates
Found in Land, air
 Only animals with waterproof skin which is covered
with feathers sometimes do have scales like
reptiles but generally on legs
 Another distinctive feature is their Beak or bill
rather than teeth
 Their forelimbs are developed into wings
 They have hollow or pneumatic bones
 Have Lungs but No external ear
 Have 4-chambered heart
 They are Warm blooded (endothermic)
 Lays water proof hard shelled Eggs
reptiles---vertebrates
Found in Land, Water
 Have dry scaly skin to prevent water loss
 Have 4 limbs (except snakes)
 Has a 3rd transparent eyelid for protection
 Lay water proof eggs with hard shells which stop
them from being drying out with exceptions such as
some snakes and lizards that give birth to live
young
 Cold blooded
 Have 3 Chambers except Crocodile which has 4
 Have Lungs but No external ear
E-g Crocodiles, Lizards, Snakes, Turtles, Tortoises,
and Dinosaurs
amphibians---vertebrates
 Most adults live on land but always go back to
water to breed
 Lays soft non shelled Eggs in water, larva called
tadpole, spend 1st half of their life in water then
body undergo series of changes(metamorphosis)
and becomes adult
 Have Moist, smooth slimy, non-scaly skin
 Some can camouflage
 Cold blooded
 Have 3 Chambers of heart and 4 limbs
 Gills in larval stage and lungs in adult stage
 Has an ear drum but no external ear
E-g Frogs, Toads, Salamanders
pisces---vertebrates
 All live in Water apart from few species e-g
mudskippers that are able to come onto land
for short time period
 Streamlined body cover with scales or plates,
a muscular tail, and several fins to swim, some
have skeleton made up of cartilage, some
have skeleton made up of bones and cartilage
 Cold blooded
 Have 2 Chambers of heart
 Have gills throughout their life
 Lay large number of soft Eggs with no shells,
with exceptions such as guppies that give birth
to live young

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