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Classification Day 6 of 17 Days to STAAR
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Page 1: Day6 classification

ClassificationDay 6 of 17 Days to STAAR

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How scientists classify living organisms:

Prokaryotic- lack a nucleus and membrane (ex: bacteria)

Eukaryotic- have a nucleus and a membrane that encloses complex structures, such as the nucleus (ex: plant cell)

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How scientists classify living organisms:

Unicellular- made up of only one cell (ex: paramecium)

Multicellular- made up more than one cell (ex: humans)

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How scientists classify living organisms:

Autotroph: make their own food using radiant energy from the sun into glucose (sugar) (ex: tree)

Heterotroph: eats other organisms to survive (ex: cow)

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How scientists classify living organisms:

Asexual reproduction: offspring arise from a single parent, resulting in uniform offspring (ex: bacteria)

Sexual reproduction: offspring arise from the mating of 2 parents; produces genetically diverse offspring (ex: dog)

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Reproduction:Reproduction is a characteristic of all living organisms.

Inherited traits are governed in the genetic material found in genes on chromosomes within the nucleus of the cell.

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ClassificationScientists classify organisms based on certain

characteristics. They are classified into the following:

Domain

Kingdom

Phylum

Class

Order

Genus

Species

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Domains & KingdomsThe 3 Domains:

Archaea- a prokaryote that may survive in extreme environments

Bacteria- a prokaryote that cannot survive in extreme environments

Eukarya- any eukaryote

The 6 Kingdoms:

Archaea (Domain Archaea)

Bacteria (Domain Bacteria)

Prostista (Domain Eukarya)

Plantae (Domain Eukarya)

Fungi (Domain Eukarya)

Animalia (Domain Eukarya)

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Dichotomous Keys:

Scientists classify living and nonliving things using a tool called a dichotomous key.

A dichotomous key is a system used to identify plants, animals, rocks, or minerals made up of a series of paired descriptions to choose between.

Dichotomous keys are used for identification of organisms, such as birds, trees, insects, vertebrates, invertebrates, and flowering plants.

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Dichotomous Key Example: