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Classification of Organisms It’s always changing!!!! Taxonomy  The science of describing, naming, and classifying organisms How Did We Get Our Modern System of Classification? Binomial Nomenclature  A system for giving each organism a two-word scientific name that consists of the genus name followed by the species name  Carl Linnaeus, a Swedish biologist in the 1700s  Approach has been universally adopted  The organism’s “scientific name” Genus & Species  A level of classification that comes after family and that contains similar species  The first word in the scientific name – Capitalized  The second word (the species name) – Lowercased  Homo sapiens Family  Similar genera  Hominidae (Great Apes) Order  A grouping of similar families  Primates Class  A grouping of orders with common properties  Mammalia Phylum  Classes with similar characteristics  Chordata (subphylum: Vertebrata) Kingdom  Similar phyla grouped together  Animalia Domain  Largest and most inclusive taxonomic category  Similar kingdoms grouped together  3 domains – Archaea (prokaryotes) – Bacteria (prokaryotes) – Eukarya (4 kingdoms of eukaryotes) Domain Domain Domain  Archaea (prokaryotes) – Kingdom Archaebacteria – Live in extreme environments: volcanic hot springs, brine pools, black organic mud – Cell wall lacks peptidoglycan (murein): made of sugars and amino acids  Bacteria (prokaryotes) – Kingdom Eubacteria – Free-living soil organisms to deadly parasites – Cell wall contains peptidoglycan Domain  Eukarya – Kingdom Protista – Kingdom Fungi – Kingdom Plantae – Kingdom Animalia How Do I Remember It All?    Do Kindly Pay Cash Or Furnish Good Security Dear King Philip Came Over For Good Soup Did Kermit Puke Cookies On Fozzie's Green Sweater? – – – – – – – – Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Biological Species  A group of organisms that can reproduce only among themselves and that are usually contained in a geographic region Convergent Evolution  The process by which unrelated species become more similar as they adapt to the same kind of environment Analogous Characters  Similarities that arise through convergent evolution Phylogeny  The evolutionary history of a species or taxonomic group  Discovered through molecular sequencing data and morphological data matrices Cladistics  A phylogenetic classification system that uses shared derived characters and ancestry as the sole criterion for grouping taxa  Example: birds and mammals: – a backbone is an ancestral character – feathers are a derived character Cladogram  A diagram that is based on patterns of shared, derived traits and that shows the evolutionary relationships between groups of organisms