Classification and evolution Flashcards

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1
Q

Why do scientists classify organisms

A
  • To identify species: by using a clearly defined system of classification, the species an organism belongs to can be easily identified
  • To predict characteristics: if several members in a group have a specific characteristic, it is likely that another species in the group will have the same characteristic
  • To find evolutionary links: species in the same group probably share characteristics because they have evolved from a common ancestor
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2
Q

What is binominal nomenclature

A

All species are given a scientific name consisting two parts:

  • The first word indicates the organism’s genus. It’s called the generic name.
  • The second word indicates the organism’s species. It’s called the specific name.
  • No two species have the same generic and specific name. Two different species could have the same specific name, however their genus would be different.
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3
Q

What are the advantages of binominal nomenclature?

A
  • Provide extra information
  • It is universal
  • It breaks language barrier for communication
  • Lesser error in communication regarding the studies on any organism because the name is unique to it and samer all around the world
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4
Q

What are the five kingdoms

A
  • Prokaryotae (bacteria)
  • Protoctista (the unicellular eukaryotes)
  • Fungi (e.g. yeast, moulds and mushrooms)
  • Plantae (plants)
  • Animalia (animals
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5
Q

Describe what prokaryotae are

A
  • Unicellular
  • No nucleus or other membrane-bound organelles – a ring of ‘naked’ DNA – small ribosomes
  • No visible feeding mechanism – nutrients are absorbed through the cell wall or produced internally by photosynthesis
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6
Q

Describe what protoctista are

A
  • mainly) unicellular
  • a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles
  • some have chloroplasts
  • some are sessile, but others move by cilia, flagella or by amoeboid mechanisms
  • nutrients are acquired by photosynthesis (autotrophic feeders), ingestion of other organisms (heterotrophic feeders, or both – some are parasitic
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7
Q

Describe what fungi are?

A
  • unicellular or multicellular
  • a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles and a cell wall mainly composed of chitin
  • no chloroplasts or chlorophyll
  • no mechanisms or locomotion
  • most have a body or mycelium made of threads or hyphae
  • nutrients are acquired by absorption – mainly from decaying material – they are saprotrophic feeders – some are parasitic
  • most store their food as glycogen
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8
Q

Describe what plantae are?

A
  • multicellular
  • a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles including chloroplasts, and a cell wall mainly composed of cellulose
  • all contain chlorophyll
  • most do not move, although gametes of some plants move using cilia or flagella
  • nutrients are acquired by photosynthesis – they are autotrophic feeders – organisms that make their own food
  • store food as starch
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9
Q

Describe what animalia are?

A
  • multicellular
  • a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles (no cell walls)
  • no chloroplasts
  • move with the aid of cilia, flagella, or contractile proteins, sometimes in the form of muscular organs
  • nutrients are acquired by ingestion – they are heterotrophic feeders
  • food stored as glycogen
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