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Taxonomy & Classification
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Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Dec 30, 2015

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Tracey Mitchell
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Page 1: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Taxonomy & Classification

Page 2: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

The Problem

• It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

• Furthermore, only 1% of the species that have ever existed are currently alive (the remaining 99% are extinct)

Page 3: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Taxonomy

• Field of biology devoted to the naming and classification of organisms

• Naming and classifying aids in the storage and transfer of information between scientists, and should facilitate understanding of general relationships between organisms

Page 4: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Carl LinnaeusFather of Taxonomy

• Swedish botanist living in the 1700’s wrote the book Systema Naturae

• Developed the hierarchical system of naming categories

• Developed the Bionomial system for naming species

• Goal to determine the underlying rules used by God in the Creation (like Newton’s Laws)

Page 5: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)
Page 6: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)
Page 7: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)
Page 8: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Plant Classification

• For the classification of plants he focused on the differences that existed between the numbers of male and female reproductive parts.

• It was supposedly scandalous in his day to refer to the sex lives of plants let alone to suggest that some females plant parts had more than one possible mate.

Page 9: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)
Page 10: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Insect Classification

• Besides being a botanist, Linnaeus was important in the development of the foundation of insect classification

• His scheme focused on the number and characteristics of their wings

Page 11: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)
Page 12: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Hierarchical Naming System

• Kingdom• Phylum• Class• Order• Family • Genus• Species

• Animalia• Chordata• Mammalia• Primates• Hominidae• Homo• Homo sapiens

Page 13: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Five Kingdom System

• Kingdom Monera(Bacteria)

• Kingdom Protista• Kingdom Fungi• Kingdom Plantae• Kingdom Animalia

Page 14: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Insects Classification

• The term “insect” refers to a Class in the Kingdom Animalia

• The groups that Linnaeus and others developed are the Orders in the Class Insecta

Page 15: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Coleoptera (Beetles)

• “sheathed wing”• They have 4 wings,

the elytra (covering) and flight wings

Page 17: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Diptera (True Flies)

• “Two wings”• They have 2 wings,

flight wings. The other ancestral wings have become halteres for stabilization during flight

• Common flies, mosquitoes, and craneflies

Page 18: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)
Page 19: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Lepidoptera

• “Scaled wing”• Butterflies and

Moths

Page 20: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)
Page 21: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Hemiptera (True Bugs)

• “Half wing”• Insects having

overlapping wings forming a triangular shape in front of the wings

• Stink bugs, assassin bugs, water striders, water boatman, etc…

Page 22: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Homoptera

• “Same wing”• Cicadas,

leafhoppers, and treehoppers

Page 23: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Hymenoptera

• “Membrane wing”• Ants, Bees, and

Wasps

Page 24: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Orthoptera

• “Straight wing”• Grasshoppers,

Crickets, and Katydids

Page 25: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Odonata

• “Toothed”• Dragonflies and

Damselflies

Page 26: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Neuroptera

• “Nerve wing”• Lacewings

Page 27: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Scientific or Species Names

• Latin – Universal Language• Underlined or Italicized• Binomial (Two names or words)

1) Genus (1st) – general term2) Species Epithet (2nd) – descriptive

term (physical descriptive, location, or in honor of scientist)

Page 28: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Descriptive Name

• Melanoplus femurrubrum (DeGeer)

Page 29: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Location Name

• Okanagana canadensis

Page 30: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Named to Honor

• Lycaeides idas nabokovi

Page 31: Taxonomy & Classification. The Problem It is currently estimated that there are between 10 and 30 million species on Earth (only 1 million have been named)

Other Examples

• Homo sapiens (Modern Humans)

“man” “thinking”• Australopithecus afarensis (Lucy)

“southern ape” “Afar region”• Haliaeetus leucocephalus

“sea eagle” “white head”