P2 Classification and Evolution Flashcards
What is the biological classification system?
- Grouping living organisms based on similar anatomical features.
- These are hierarchal (grouped from most general, to most specific).
How many taxonomic groups does the biological classification system contain, and name these taxonomic levels.
7:
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
What is the binomial name of a species, and what advantages does this have?
- Genus species
- Binomial names are universally accepted.
- They also specify which genus the organism belongs to.
What is the modern classification system?
- Grouping living organisms based on DNA, RNA and proteins of different organisms.
How many kingdoms were organisms originally classified into, and what were they?
5 kingdoms - based on observable characteristics from a light (then later electron) microscope:
- prokaryota
- protoctista
- fungi
- plantae
- animalia
Under the 5 kingdom system, prokaryota are all prokaryotes, and the other 4 kingdoms are all eukaryotes (all contain a nucleus).
Characteristics of prokaryota (original kingdoms)
- Unicellular
- No membrane-bound organelles or nucleus
- Contain a cell wall
- Heterotrophic and autotrophic
- 70S ribosomes
Characteristics of protoctista (original kingdoms)
- Mostly unicellular, few multicellular.
- Contain membrane-bound organelles and a nucleus
- Mostly no cell walls
- Heterotrophic and autotrophic
- 80S ribosomes
Characteristics of fungi (original kingdoms)
- Uniceullular or multicellular
- Contain membrane-bound organelles and a nucleus
- Cell wall (made of chitin)
- Heterotrophic
- 80S ribosomes
Characteristics of plantae (original kingdoms)
- Multicellular
- Contain membrane-bound organelles and a nucleus
- Cell wall (made of cellulose)
- Autotrophic
- 80S ribosomes
Characteristics of animalia (original kingdoms)
- Multicellular
- Contain membrane-bound organelles and a nucleus
- No cell wall
- Heterotrophic
- 80S ribosomes
What changes have been made to the 5 kingdom system recently?
- Scientists divided prokaryota into two kingdoms: eubacteria and archea-bacteria, creating 6 kingdoms.
- They have all of the same characteristics, except eubacteria has a cell wall made of peptidoglycan, and archeo-bacteria has a cell wall that is not made of peptidoglycan.
- Scientists concluded that all eukaryotes (the 4 remaining kingdoms) were very similar, whereas eubacteria and archeo-bacteria were very different from those kingdoms, and from each other. Therefore an extra layer of classification as added above kingdoms (domains).
What is the domain system?
- Organisms are in one of 3 domains: archea, bacteria or eukarya.
- This resulted in the 6 kingdom, 3 domain system that is used today.
What are the causes of variation?
- Genetic factors eg. different alleles or mutations can lead to genetic variation.
- Environmental factors eg. different soil pH or temperatures can lead to environmental variation.
What is variation, and what are the types of variation?
- Variation is differences in characteristics between organisms.
- Interspecific variation is differences between organisms of different species.
- Intraspecific variation is differences between organisms of the same species (same species meaning they produce fertile offspring, have a similar appearance and similar genetic makeup).
What are the two types of intraspecific variation?
- Discontinuous variation - results in distinct characteristics eg. blood groups, meaning they are controlled by one or two genes that are not affected by environmental factors.
- Continuous variation - results in a range of characteristics eg. height, controlled by many genes (polygenic) that are affected by environmental factors.