Taxonomy Flashcards
1
Q
What is Polytomy?
A
- A node on a phylogeny where more than two lineages descend from a single common ancestor
- Indicates
We don’t know the relationship between the descendent
lineages
Descendent lineages spectated simultaneously
2
Q
How are species named?
A
- Common name
Not generally standardized
Multiple names for one species possible
Multiple species for one name possible
Varies across languages - Scientific name
Standardized and consistent around the world
Changes with phylogeny
3
Q
Scientific Names
A
- Composed of two words
Genus
Species - Underlined rather than italics if handwritten
- Sometimes the species is written as “sp” or
“spp” - Sometimes there is also a subspecies
In this case we use trinomial nomenclature
4
Q
What is taxonomy?
A
- Study of the principles of scientific classification; systematic ordering and naming of organisms
- Who governs taxonomy?
Nobody
New species are decided via peer-review
5
Q
History of Taxonomy
A
- Linneaus : Father of Taxonomy
- First unified system for naming all plants and animals
Based on shared characters among organisms
Doesn’t consider evolution (predates evolutionary biology) - Basic principles remain, but many of his classifications are drastically altered in modern taxonomy (based on evolution)
- We still follow a hierarchical system of classification
6
Q
Taxonomic Ranks
A
- Hierarchical system of classification based on Linnaean taxonomy
- Each species belongs to a single Genus, Family, Order, Class, Phylum, Kingdom and Domain
- Intermediate taxa are also possible
- Problematic in some ways
7
Q
Taxonomic Hierarchy
A
- 3 domains and 5-6 kingdoms
- Primary focus of this class is at the Phylum level
Each lecture in Animal Diversity section focuses on a single
Phylum - Examples given at the species level
8
Q
Taxonomic Ranks (Domains)
A
Eukaryote (membrane-bound nucleus) Animals Plants Protists Fungi Bacteria and Archaea Prokaryotes (no nuclear membrane)
9
Q
5 Kingdom System
A
Animalia (Metazoan) Plantae Fungi Protista Monera (all prokaryotes)
10
Q
6 Kingdom System
A
Animalia (Metazoa) Plantae Fungi Protista Bacteria Archea
11
Q
Old vs New
A
modern usage only relies on evolutionary relationships, but keeps this old hierarchical structure
12
Q
Some problems with modern taxonomy
A
- Not governed by any international body
- Skewed towards pedagogical convenience rather than a true reflection of phylogeny
- Hierarchical ranks are difficult and outdated
13
Q
Metazoans and Protozoans
A
- Metazoa is a kingdom of multi cellular animals (also called Animalia)
- Protista is a kingdom of unicellular eukaryotes. Includes
Protozoa: animal-like unicellular eukaryotes
Protophyta: plant-like unicellular eukaryotes
Fungus-like slime molds
Not monophyletic
14
Q
What are Protozoa?
A
- Once considered to be a phylum
- No longer recognized as a monophyletic clade
- Understood to be spread throughout eukaryotic clades
Unicellular eukaryotes are a paraphyletic group
15
Q
The group formerly known as Protozoa
A
- It is convenient to discuss these organisms as a group
- They have little in common from an evolutionary perspective
- Can be referred to as animal-like unicellular eukaryotes