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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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8
Q

Taxonomic Ranks (Domains)

A
Eukaryote (membrane-bound nucleus)
    Animals 
    Plants 
    Protists 
    Fungi 
Bacteria and Archaea 
     Prokaryotes (no nuclear membrane)
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9
Q

5 Kingdom System

A
Animalia (Metazoan)
Plantae 
Fungi 
Protista 
Monera (all prokaryotes)
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10
Q

6 Kingdom System

A
Animalia (Metazoa)
Plantae
Fungi
Protista
Bacteria
Archea
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11
Q

Old vs New

A

modern usage only relies on evolutionary relationships, but keeps this old hierarchical structure

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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
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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
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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
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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
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