chapters 18 and 19

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CHAPTERS 18 AND 19 Classification and the Tree of Life

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Chapters 18 and 19. Classification and the Tree of Life. Systematics. The scientific way of organizing and naming living things Dichotomous keys are used for identification purposes Based on physical traits. Cladograms. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapters 18 and 19

CHAPTERS 18 AND 19

Classification and the Tree of Life

Page 2: Chapters 18 and 19

SYSTEMATICS The scientific way of organizing and

naming living things Dichotomous keys are used for

identification purposesBased on physical traits

Page 3: Chapters 18 and 19

CLADOGRAMSCladograms are diagrams the depict the pattern of shared characters, either derived characters or primitive charactersPrimative: characteristic shared by all organisms in the cladogram (Vert. ColumnDerived: trait that arose in the most recent common ancestorBased on DNA, skeletal, and comparisons

Page 4: Chapters 18 and 19

CLADOGRAMS Clade: Consists of a single

common ancestor and all the groups that descended from that ancestor Organism A,B,C are all

related because they are in the same Clade

Organisms B and C are more closely related than B and A because organisms B and C share a common trait

Node: Point where two groups branch off from each other

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CLADOGRAM

1. Which traits does a lizard and a salamander share?2. Which two organisms are most closely related?3. What trait does a human have that gorilla does not?

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PHYLOGENY & SYSTEMATICSCarolus Linnaeus first to assign each species a two-part latinized name called binomial nomenclature (Genus species)Ex: Homo sapians

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PHYLOGENY & SYSTEMATICS

Phylogenetic trees show the relationship between classification and phylogenyYear 2525 Activity

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OLD WAY 5 Kingdoms – Bacteria grouped into one kingdom called Monera

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NEW WAY 6 Kingdoms1. Eubacteria*2. Achaebacteria*3. Plantae4. Animalia5. Fungi6. Protista

3 Domains: Bacteria, Achaea, and Eukarya (Plantae, Animalia, Fungi, and Protista)

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BACTERIA VS. ARCHAEA The first two of the 3 domain system Kingdom Bacteria (Eubacteria) Kingdom Archaeabacteria Both are unicellular and

prokaryotic

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BACTERIA Bacteria are classified by

shape: Spheres are cocci –us Rods are bacilli –us Curves or spirals are spirilli

-um

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EUBACTERIA• Free living or parasitic• Unicellular• As a group they exhibit

much more nutrition diversity than eukaryotes, ex: cyanobacteria

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ARCHAEABACTERIA• They are the oldest life-

forms & remain the most numerous & widespread organisms

• Unicellular or multicellular

• Archaea are extremeophiles• Halophiles – salt loving• Thermophiles – hot vents• Methanogens – gassy

areas

Page 14: Chapters 18 and 19

THE GRAM STAIN Allows scientists to classify types of

bacteria based on what the cell wall is made up of

Gram positive bacteria lack a cell wall and retain the stain appearing purple

Gram negative bacteria have a cell wall so do not take up the stain and appear pink

Page 15: Chapters 18 and 19

REPRODUCTION Reproduce via binary fission or conjugation Binary Fission = form of asexual reproduction Conjugation = Transfer of genetic material by

cell to cell contact

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BACTERIA

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BACTERIA External Structures: Capsule - the cell wall is

covered in a sticky capsule, this slime layer helps to evade the immune system & adhere to surfaces

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BACTERIA External Structures: Pili - used to stick to

their substrate, hair-like projections, & can be used for the exchange of genetic material (sex pili)

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BACTERIA• External Structures:• Flagella - enable bacteria

to move, embedded in the cell membrane & cell wall

• Other forms of motility include chemotaxis, phototaxis & magnetotaxis

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BACTERIA• Internal Structures:• Endospores - some

prokaryotes can withstand harsh conditions by remaining dormant, until conditions become favorable; just encloses the DNA

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BACTERIA Some bacteria cause

disease, called pathogenic bacteria

They can release exotoxins or endotoxins

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BACTERIA Bacteria can be used

as biological weapons Ex: anthrax

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BACTERIA

• Prokaryotes help recycle chemicals, dead and decaying materials and they can help clean the environment

• Examples of bioremediation: sewage treatment facilities, oil spills & toxic mine wastes

Page 24: Chapters 18 and 19

VIRUSES Non-living particles composed of two main

parts: They cannot move or grow, and can only

reproduce inside a host cell (No Kingdom affiliation)

Why do antibiotics not work to kill a virus? How the Flu Virus invades a cell

Page 25: Chapters 18 and 19

VIRUSES Human Examples: Chickenpox Smallpox Rabies AIDS Cancers Hepatitis Influenza A, B & C

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PROTISTS A eukaryote that is not a fungus, plant,

or animal Very diverse! Can be plant-like, animal-like, and

fungus-likeExample: African Sleeping Sickness caused by TrypanosomaVideo

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FUNGI Heterotrophic eukaryotes Feed by absorption Can be helpful – mushroom Can be harmful – athelete’s foot,

ringworm Video: Penicillin

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PLANTS Eukaryotes with cell walls Carry out photosynthesis

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ANIMALS Multicellular, eukaryotic organisms that

lack a cell wall Two groups

Invertebrates – animals without a backboneVertebrates – animals with a backbone

Symmetry:NoneRadial: symmetrical around a central pointBilateral: divided along a central plant

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VERTEBRATES Order of evolution from earliest to most

recent: Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Mammals