Top Banner
Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2
16

Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Dec 24, 2015

Download

Documents

Gyles Ellis
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Modern Evolutionary Classification

Section 17-2

Page 2: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Problems with Traditional Classification

• Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical features.

• Biologists now group organisms into categories based on their evolutionary history, not just physical similarities.

Page 3: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

How are evolutionary relationships determined?

• Structural similarities• Geographical distribution• Biochemistry

– Similar DNA and proteins

• Chromosome comparison– # and structure of chromosomes

• Breeding behavior– Ex. Different calls keep mates from within same group

• Embryonic development

Page 4: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Phylogeny

• What is it?– The evolutionary history of a species

• How is it shown?– Using models called phylogenetic trees

Page 5: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.
Page 6: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Cladistics

• A system of classification based on phylogeny

• It classifies organisms according to the order that they diverged from a common ancestor.

Page 7: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Cladistics

• Scientists look at ancestral characters, those found in the entire line of descent

• They also identify a group’s derived traits (unique inherited characteristics not found in a common ancestor) and use them to construct a branching diagram called a cladogram, a model of the phylogeny of a species.

Page 8: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.
Page 9: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

How does a cladogram work?

• 2 groups on diverging branches probably share a more recent common ancestor than those groups farther away.

• They show a probable evolution of a group of organisms from ancestral groups.

Page 10: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

The Six Kingdoms of Organisms

• Archaebacteria

• Eubacteria

• Protists

• Fungi

• Plants

• Animals

Page 11: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Kingdom Archaebacteria

• Prokaryotic– Unicellular– No membrane-bound nuclei

• Most live in harsh environments– Swamps, deep-ocean vents, etc.– Mostly no oxygen (anaerobic)

Page 12: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Kingdom Eubacteria

• Prokaryotic

• ~5000 species

• Very strong cell walls

• Live in most habitats, except extreme

• Some causes diseases, most are harmless

Page 13: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Kingdom Protista

• Eukaryotic

• Lacks complex organ systems

• Lives in moist environments

• Some unicellular, some multicellular

• Example: kelp

Page 14: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Kingdom Fungi

• Eukaryotic

• Heterotrophic—absorbs nutrients from organic materials in the environment

• Immobile (unmoving)

• Unicellular or multicellular

• Over 50,000 species

Page 15: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Kingdom Plantae

• Eukaryotic

• Multicellular

• Photosynthetic

• Immobile

• Cells tissues organs organ systems

• Over 250,000 species

Page 16: Modern Evolutionary Classification Section 17-2. Problems with Traditional Classification Originally, organisms were grouped according to their physical.

Kingdom Animalia

• Eukaryotic

• Multicellular

• Heterotrophic

• Mobile (move from place to place)

• Cells tissues organs organ systems