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					Classification 5.5.1 Outline the binomial system of nomenclature 5.5.2 List seven levels in the hierarchy of taxa Why Classify?  2.5 million species identified so far  Not even close to complete inventory  Need a system to organize species What makes a good system?  Assign a universally accepted name to each organism so every scientist knows exactly what is being discussed.  Grouping should have good biological reason so that researchers can expect a group to share important characteristics. Biological Classification  By 18th century needed universal naming system that did away with common names  Solved language issues  Meant that same name was not being used for different organisms Early Scientific Names  Described physical characteristics of organism  Could be 20 words long  For example: “Oak with deeply divided leaves with no hairs on the underside, and no teeth around their edges.” Binomial Nomenclature  Carolus von Linnaeus  Two-word naming system  Genus  Noun, Capitalized, Underlined or Italicized  Species  Descriptive, Lower Case, Underlined or Italicized Carolus von Linnaeus (1707-1778) Swedish scientist who laid the foundation for modern taxonomy Binomial Nomenclature  Example: Acer rubrum is the scientific name for a red maple -- Acer is the genus name and all maple trees carry this name -- rubrum means “red” and is the species name "Formal" scientific names should have a third part, the authority. The authority is not italicized or underlined. The authority is written as an abbreviation of the last name of the person responsible for naming the organism. Authority continued Since Carolus Linnaeus was the first person to name many plants, the L. for Linnaeus is very common in plant scientific names.  An example is Quercus alba L. Kingdoms and Domains The three-domain system Bacteria Archaea Eukarya The six-kingdom system Bacteria Archaea Protista Plantae Fungi Animalia Plantae Fungi Animalia The traditional five-kingdom system Monera Protista Hierarchical Classification  Taxonomic categories  Kingdom King  Phylum Philip  Class Came  Order Over  Family For  Genus Great  Species Spaghetti Phylum / Division  Division used in plants, fungi and bacteria kingdoms Systematics: Evolutionary Classification of Organisms  Systematics is the study of the evolution of biological diversity, and combines data from the following areas.  Fossil record  Comparative homologies  Cladistics  Comparative sequencing of DNA/RNA among organisms  Molecular clocks History  Aristotle 388-322 BC Plants/Animals  Haeckel (1866) Plants/Animals/Protists  Whittaker (1969) Fungi/Plants/Animals/Protists/Monerans  Woese,Kandler, Wheelis (1990) Domain system (Archea, Bacteria, Eucarya) Arisotle’s system  Historia Animalium  Plant classification lost  Heirarchy – humans at top but species unchanging not an evolutionary tree  System persisted with little change until 16th century Three Kingdoms  Plants  Animals  Minerals 1735 1st edition 1758 10th edition Classification of Humans