Classification is the grouping of organisms based on similarities, which aids in identifying and studying biodiversity and understanding evolutionary relationships. The document outlines early classification systems, the binomial nomenclature, levels of classification, and the five kingdoms of life. It also highlights the importance of scientific names and advances in classification through DNA evidence.
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Classification_Presentation
Classification is the grouping of organisms based on similarities, which aids in identifying and studying biodiversity and understanding evolutionary relationships. The document outlines early classification systems, the binomial nomenclature, levels of classification, and the five kingdoms of life. It also highlights the importance of scientific names and advances in classification through DNA evidence.
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Classification
• Understanding the Organization of Living
Things What is Classification? • • Grouping of organisms based on similarities • • Helps in identifying and studying organisms Why Classification is Important • • Organizes biodiversity • • Makes studying organisms easier • • Helps understand evolutionary relationships Early Systems of Classification • • Aristotle: Classified by habitat and movement • • Carolus Linnaeus: Father of modern taxonomy Binomial Nomenclature • • Two-part scientific name (Genus species) • • Example: Homo sapiens (human) • • Always italicized or underlined Levels of Classification • • Domain • • Kingdom • • Phylum • • Class • • Order • • Family • • Genus • • Species The 5 Kingdoms • • Monera • • Protista • • Fungi • • Plantae • • Animalia Modern Classification: 3 Domains • • Bacteria • • Archaea • • Eukarya Kingdom Monera • • Single-celled, prokaryotic • • Examples: Bacteria, cyanobacteria Kingdom Protista • • Mostly single-celled, eukaryotic • • Examples: Amoeba, Paramecium Kingdom Fungi • • Multicellular or unicellular, decomposers • • Examples: Yeast, mushrooms Kingdom Plantae • • Multicellular, autotrophic • • Examples: Mosses, ferns, flowering plants Kingdom Animalia • • Multicellular, heterotrophic • • Examples: Insects, fish, mammals Invertebrates vs Vertebrates • • Invertebrates: No backbone (e.g., insects) • • Vertebrates: Have backbone (e.g., birds, humans) Vertebrate Groups • • Fish • • Amphibians • • Reptiles • • Birds • • Mammals Plant Classification • • Flowering vs Non-flowering • • Monocots vs Dicots Use of Keys in Classification • • Dichotomous keys: Help identify organisms • • Based on step-by-step choices Advances in Classification • • DNA and molecular evidence • • More accurate evolutionary relationships Importance of Scientific Names • • Avoids confusion from common names • • Used universally by scientists Summary • • Classification groups organisms based on features • • From kingdom to species • • Helps in scientific study and communication Thank You • Any Questions?