classification – chapter 18

66
Classification – Chapter 18

Upload: zahi

Post on 24-Feb-2016

38 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Classification – Chapter 18. Early Systems of Classification. Taxonomy – naming and grouping organisms according to their characteristics and evolutionary history. Aristotle first classified organisms 2,000 years ago. “Classify This” He classified living things as either plants or animals. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Classification – Chapter 18

Classification – Chapter 18

Page 2: Classification – Chapter 18

Early Systems of Classification

• Taxonomy – naming and grouping organisms according to their characteristics and evolutionary history.

• Aristotle first classified organisms 2,000 years ago. “Classify This”

• He classified living things as either plants or animals.

• Grouped animals into: land dwellers, water dwellers, air dweller.

Page 3: Classification – Chapter 18

Early systems of Classification cont…

• Grouped plants by: differences in their stems.• Biologists realized that Aristotle’s categories were

not adequate.• They found that using common names for

organisms caused a problem because they were named differently from place to place. Ex. Robin, called something different elsewhere

• Common names may not describe species accurately. Ex. Jellyfish; it isn’t a fish at all, starfish, koala bear

Page 4: Classification – Chapter 18

Linnaeus’s System

• Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778)

• Came up with a system of grouping organisms.

• He used the organism’s morphology (form and structure) to categorize it.

Page 5: Classification – Chapter 18

Levels of Classification

• Made up a hierarchy of seven different levels of organization to classify organisms.

Keep KingdomPlates PhylumClean ClassOr OrderFamily FamilyGets GenusSick Species

Page 6: Classification – Chapter 18

Kingdoms

• Linneus seperated organisms into two kingdoms: plant and animal.

• Phylum – subset in the animal kingdom.• Division – subset in the plant kingdom.• Within a phylum or division there are subsets

called classes.• Subset within a class is an order.• Then family then genus and lastly species.

Page 7: Classification – Chapter 18

Examples:

BobcatKingdom AnimaliaPhylum/division ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraFamily FelidaeGenus LynxSpeciesLynx rufus

Page 8: Classification – Chapter 18

Scientific Name

Genus name + species name

Page 9: Classification – Chapter 18

Binomial Nomenclature

• Bi-two• Two naming systemGenus + species identifierHumans are known by our genus, homo and

species name, sapiens meaning “wise”-scientific name is underlined or in italics.Linnaeus’s system is still used today.

Page 10: Classification – Chapter 18

• Sometimes Botanists split species into subsets known as varieties.

• Peaches and nectarines are fruits of two slightly different varieties of the peach tree, Prunus persica.

Page 11: Classification – Chapter 18

• Zoologists refer to variations of a species that occur in different geographic areas as subspecies.

• Subspecies name follows the species identifier.• Ex. Terrapene carolina triungui subspecies of

the common eastern box turtle. Gets its name by having three, rather than four toes on its hind feet.

Page 12: Classification – Chapter 18

Phylogeny

• Evolutionary history of organism.• Scientists consider the organism’s phylogeny

when classifying it.• Linnaeus focused on features that are largely

influenced by genes that are clues to common ancestry.

Page 13: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 15: Classification – Chapter 18

Homework

• Pg. 339• Questions: 1-6

• Wiki-space go to Chapter 18 page.

Page 16: Classification – Chapter 18

• Imperium ("Empire") - the phenomenal world • Regnum ("Kingdom") - the three great divisions of

nature at the time - animal, vegetable, and mineral • Classis ("Class") - subdivisions of the above, in the

animal kingdom six were recognized (mammals, birds, amphibians, fish, insects, and worms)

• Ordo ("Order") - further subdivision of the above - the class Mammalia has eight

• Genus - further subdivisions of the order - in the mammalian order Primates there are four. e.g. Homo

• Species - subdivisions of genus, e.g. Homo sapiens. • Varietas ("Variety") - species variant, e.g. Homo

sapiens europaeus.

Page 17: Classification – Chapter 18

Section 3 Two Modern Systems of Classification

6-Kingdom Classification1. Archaebacteria autotroph/heterotroph2. Eubacteria autotroph/heterotroph3. Protista autotroph/heterotroph4. Fungi heterotroph5. Plantae autotroph/heterotroph6. Animalia heterotroph

Page 18: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 19: Classification – Chapter 18

Archaebacteria

• Unicellular• Live in extreme habitats• One of the first organisms to inhabit the Earth.Habitats: hot springs, salty lakes, swampsAnaerobic environments - without oxygenThermophiles – heat loversMethanogens – produce methane gasHalophiles – salt lovers

Page 20: Classification – Chapter 18

• Halophiles

• Thermophiles

Page 21: Classification – Chapter 18

Eubacteria

• Common bacteria• Most use oxygen; few cannot live in the

presence of oxygen.• Decomposers• Used in food making• Cause disease• Bioremediation – bacteria that eat oil spills

Page 22: Classification – Chapter 18

Shapes of Bacteria

• Cocci – round• Bacilli – rod• Spirilla – spiral

• Planes - staph• Chains – strepto

ex. Streptococcus

Page 23: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 24: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 25: Classification – Chapter 18

Classifying Bacteria

• Gram Staining• Procedure that stains bacteria.• Some bacteria stain pink other stain purple.• Gram stain positive – purple• Gram stain negative – pink• This tells scientists what kind of wall the

bacteria has. More peptidoglycan more rigid wall --- gram positive

Page 26: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 27: Classification – Chapter 18

• Gram positive

Page 28: Classification – Chapter 18

• Gram negative

Page 29: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 30: Classification – Chapter 18

Classifying Bacteria

• Agar – media that is used to grow bacteria.• Strict aerobe – grow only in the presence of

oxygen.• Strict anaerobe – grow only in the presence of

no oxygen.• Facultative anaerobe – prefer oxygen

environments but can grow throughout a medium.

Page 32: Classification – Chapter 18

Classifying Bacteria

• Some can metabolism certain substances.• Lactose – bacteria can metabolize lactose.– Ex. Lactobacillus

Motile – some bacteria can move throughout a media.

Page 33: Classification – Chapter 18

Classifying Bacteria

• Differential media: Some shows different reactions.

• Selective media: Some can grow certain bacteria.

Page 34: Classification – Chapter 18

Viewing Microbes

• Resolution(seeing detail) can be increased using immersion oil.

• Allows the light ray to go directly through the objective lens.

Page 35: Classification – Chapter 18

Reproduction

• Binary Fission

Page 36: Classification – Chapter 18

Conjugation

• Bacteria gives its DNA to another bacteria.

Page 37: Classification – Chapter 18

Phylum Cyanobacteria

• Photosynthetic – use the sun’s energy to make food.

• Early atmosphere was filled with oxygen produced by cyanobacteria which allowed aerobic organisms to develop.

• Lack a membrane-bound nucleus like all bacteria.• Enclosed with a jellylike case which help them

cling together.

Page 38: Classification – Chapter 18

Cyanobacteria

Page 39: Classification – Chapter 18

Heterocysts

• Some Cyanobacteria grow in chains.• Some of the cells specialize – these cells are

called heterocysts.• Heterocysts contain enzymes for fixing

atmospheric nitrogen.• Make nitrogen available to plants in a form

that plants can use.• Nitrogen fixing bacteria

Page 40: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 41: Classification – Chapter 18

Eutrophication

• Some cyanobacteria like Anabaena thrive on phosphates and nitrates that accumjulate in a body of water.

• Sudden increase in the number of cyanobacteria due to a high availability of nutrients is called eutrophication or population bloom.

• Then cyanobacteria die and heterotrophic bacteria eat them.

• Their population increase which uses up a lot of oxygen in the water causing other organisms in the water like fish to die.

Page 42: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 43: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 44: Classification – Chapter 18

Phylum Spirochetes

• Gram-negative, spiral-shaped heterotrophic bacteria.

• Some are aerobic and some are anaerobic.• Move by means of a corkscrew-like rotation.• Some live freely, symbiotically, or parasitically.Ex. Treponema pallidum – causes the STD syphilis.

Page 45: Classification – Chapter 18

Phylum Gram-Positive Bacteria

• Not all members are gram-positive• Some gram-negative bacteria are grouped in

this phylum because they share molecular similarities with gram-positive bacteria.

Ex. Streptococci – causes strep throat Lactobacilli – found on teeth, known to cause tooth decay.

Page 46: Classification – Chapter 18

Actinomycetes

• Gram-positive bacteria• Form branching filaments• Grow in soil and produce many antibiotics.Antibiotics – chemicals that inhibit the growth

of or kill other microscopic organisms.

Page 47: Classification – Chapter 18

Phylum Proteobacteria

• Largest and most diverse phylum of bacteria.• Subdivisions: enteric bacteria,

chemoautotrophic bacteria, and nitrogen-fixing bacteria

Page 48: Classification – Chapter 18

Enteric Bacteria

• Gram-negative• Heterotrophic• Live in animal intestinal tracts.• Live in both aerobic and anaerobic environments.• Ex. E. coli• E. coli lives in the human intestine where it

produces vitamin K and assists enzymes in the breakdown of foods.

• Salmonella – food poisoning

Page 49: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 50: Classification – Chapter 18

Chemoautotrophs

• Gram-negative• Extract energy from minerals by oxidizing the

chemicals in these minerals.• Ex. Iron-oxidizing bacteria live in freshwater

ponds that contain a high concentration of iron salts. Bacteria oxidize the iron in the salts to obtain energy.

• Rhizobium nitrogen-fixing bacteria that live symbiotically with plants.

Page 51: Classification – Chapter 18

Rhizobium

Page 52: Classification – Chapter 18

• Pg. 473• Questions 1-6

Page 53: Classification – Chapter 18

Chapter 24 sec. 3

• Bacteria and Humans• Pathology – study of disease.• Bacteria cause disease by producing poisons

called toxins. – Exotoxins are toxins that are made of protein.– Exotoxins are produced by gram-positive bacteria

and are secreted into the surrounding environment.

– Ex. Tetanus is a disease caused by an exotoxin.

Page 54: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 55: Classification – Chapter 18

– Endotoxins – toxins made of lipids and carbohydrates. Made from the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria, such as E.coli.

– Unlike exotoxins that are continually released by gram-positive bacteria; endotoxins are released when the gram-negative bacteria dies.

– Cause fever, body aches, and weakness, damage the vessels of the circulatory system.

Page 56: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 57: Classification – Chapter 18

Antibiotics• Drugs that combat bacteria by

interfering with various cellular functions.

• Ex. Penicillin interferes with cell wall synthesis.– Tetracycline interferes with

bacterial protein synthesis.– Many antibiotics come from

chemicals that bacteria and fungi produce.

– Antibiotics protect bacteria and fungi from other microscopic invaders.

Page 58: Classification – Chapter 18

Antibiotics

• Some antibiotics such as sulfa drugs are synthesized in laboratories.

• Many antibiotics are able to affect a wide variety of organisms; they are given the name broad spectrum antibiotics.

• Table 24-5 Common Antibiotics1. What drugs inhibits protein synthesis in bacteria?2. What drug inhibits DNA synthesis in bacteria and

what is this drug used to treat?

Page 59: Classification – Chapter 18

Antibiotic Resistance

• When a population of bacteria is exposed to an antibiotic the bacteria that are most susceptible to the antibiotic die first.

• A few mutant bacteria that are resistant to the antibiotic may continue to grow.

• Antibiotics have been overused so many diseases that were once easy to treat are becoming more difficult to treat.

Page 60: Classification – Chapter 18

Useful Bacteria

• Break down the remains of organic matter• Recycles carbon and nitrogen• Producing and processing food– Ferment lactose in milk to produce sour cream,

cheese, buttermilk, and yogurt– Sauerkraut– pickles

• Industrial chemical production• Bioremediation – cleaning up oil spills

Page 61: Classification – Chapter 18
Page 62: Classification – Chapter 18

HomeworkPg. 480 questions 1-6

Page 63: Classification – Chapter 18

Brochure Project• You will make an informational brochure about a

bacterial disease. You will use Microsoft Publisher. Let me know when you are ready to print!

• Include:– Gram positive or gram negative– Shape of bacteria– How one is contracted by this disease– How the disease is treated– Symptoms of the disease– Additional information (websites where one can get more

information)– 2 pictures (nothing too disgusting)

Page 64: Classification – Chapter 18

Disease to Choose From• Bacterial Meningitis tc• Lyme Disease bp• Botulism gd• Cholera kk• Rocky Mountain

Spotted Fever dm• Whooping Cough

(Pertussis) js• Tetanus sb

• Strep throat lh• Gonorrhea js• Tuberculosis ml• Salmonella vb• E.coli aw• Syphilis rc

Page 65: Classification – Chapter 18

Viruses

• Not living• Contain DNA or RNA and a protein coat.• Different shapes

Page 66: Classification – Chapter 18

Kingdom Protista

• Most are single-celled• Some are multi-cellular like kelp.• Protists are grouped:– Plant-like– Fungi-like– Animal-like