classification and biodiversity Flashcards
define phylogenetics
the study of evolutionary history and relationships among organism.
can be represented as a tree
define classification
the placing of organisms into groups, which are divided up into progressively smaller groups
define hierarchy
a system of ranking in which small groups are nested components of larger groups
define taxonomy
the identification and naming of organisms
define domain
the largest taxon, split into 3 groupings (Bacteria and Archaea which are prokaryotes, and Eukaryotes)
define kingdom
the second largest grouping, consisting of Prokaryota, Protoctista, Fungi, Animalia, Plantae
define phylum
a subgroup of a kingdom, defined by body plan
define class
a subgroup of phylum combining taxa with a distinct level of complexity (e.g mammalia)
define order
subgroup of a class
define family
a group within an order, for a group of genera. humans are part of the Hominidiae, along with great apes reflecting our recent evolutionary divergence
define genus
a group of similar organisms - we are homo sapiens, and shared the genus with
define species
a group of phenotypically similar organisms capable of interbreeding to produce fertile offspring
define homologous structures
structure with different functions, but a similar form and developmental origin indicating a more recent common ancestor
define divergent evolution
when evolution from a common ancestral structure gives rise to structures that perform many different functions
define analogous structures
structures that perform the same function and have a similar shape, but have different developmental origins
define convergent evolution
when evolution gives rise to structures with similar properties but different developmental origins
define biodiversity
the number of species (species richness) and the number of individuals within each species (species evenness) in a specified region
define polymorphism
the term used to describe the presence of several different forms or types of individuals among the members of a single species, resulting form a given gene having multiple alleles (e.g eye colour can be blue, green, brown)
how does a phylogenetic tree work?
- the further up the diagram you go, the further forward in time
- the species at the top are all species that exist now
- the shorter branches are species that are extinct
- the points at which the branches join highlight common ancestors
what is the hierarchy of biological classification?
domain
kingdom
phylum
class
order
family
genus
species
are taxa discrete or continuous, and what does this mean?
discrete
at any level of classification, an organism belongs in one taxon and no other
why do we need a classification system?
- it allows us to infer evolutionary relationships. if two organisms are in the same taxon, we infer that they are more closely related
- if a new animal is discovered with a beak and feathers, we predict some of its other characteristics based on our general understanding of birds
- it improves scientific communication. e.g. it is easier to say ‘bird’ than a complicated phrase
what are domains defined based on?
originally defined on rRNA base sequences but more modern methods consider similarities in DNA base sequences
what are the three domains?
- bacteria (eubacteria)
- archaea (archaeabacteria)
- eukaryota