Name: ______Period: _____ Date: ______

Chapter 17 Reading Guide: Classification of Organisms

17.1: Biodiversity

1. Define these two words:

Taxonomy:

Taxon:

2. Who was one of the first people to classify organisms and what were the groups he

used?

3. Who is the person responsible for the modern system of classification and when

did he live?

4. The system of two-part names is known as ______

______.

5. Biologists refer to variations of a species that live in different geographic areas as

______.

17.2: Systematics

6. What is phylogeny?

7. What is a phylogenetic tree and what does it show. Draw an example.

8. What pieces of evidence do biologists have of shared ancestry and use to classify

according to phylogeny? (there are five mentioned and 3 explained)

9. How is cladistics similar to and different from phylogenetics?

10. Differentiate between a shared trait and a derived trait. Be sure to give examples.

11. Describe how a cladogram is constructed.

12. What is a molecular clock and how is it used to classify organisms?

17.3: Modern Classification

Above the level of kingdom is something called a domain. Name the three domains,

describe characteristics of and give examples of organisms in each domain.

13. - 15.

16. – 18.

19. – 21.

Describe the characteristics and give examples of the following kingdoms:

22. - 23. Kingdom Protista

24. - 25. Kingdom Fungi

26. - 27. Kingdom Plantae

28. - 29. Kingdom Animalia


Name: __Answer Key__ Period: _____ Date: ______

Chapter 17 Reading Guide: Classification of Organisms

17.1: Biodiversity

1. Define these two words:

Taxonomy:

Science of naming, describing, classifying

organisms

Taxon:

Group that organisms are put into

2. Who was one of the first people to classify organisms and what were the groups he

used?

Aristotle….plants and animals

3. Who is the person responsible for the modern system of classification and when

did he live?

Linnaeus…1700’s (1707 – 1778)

4. The system of two-part names is known as __Binomial__

___Nomenaclature___.

5. Biologists refer to variations of a species that live in different geographic areas as

__subspecies___. (e.g. dog and cat breeds)

17.2: Systematics

6. What is phylogeny?

Evolutionary history of an organism

7. What is a phylogenetic tree and what does it show. Draw an example.

Looks like a family tree, branches shows how closely related organisms are

8. What pieces of evidence do biologists have of shared ancestry and use to classify

according to phylogeny? (there are five mentioned and 3 explained)

·  visible similarities (living and/or fossils)

·  patterns of embryonic development

·  similar chromosomes and molecules (DNA/RNA)

·  homologous structures

·  analogous structures

9. How is cladistics similar to and different from phylogenetics?

Similar: attempts to show evolutionary

relationships

Different: uses only shared characteristics

and derived characteristics, not other evidence

10. Differentiate between a shared trait and a derived trait. Be sure to give examples.

Shared trait (character): something a group

has in common, e.g. all mammals have hair, feed young milk,

Derived trait (character): something that is

unique to that group, e.g. all birds have feathers, all amphibians spend part of their life in water and part on land.

11. Describe how a cladogram is constructed.

Make a data table of characteristics

Whichever group has least traits in common

was first, and so on

12. What is a molecular clock and how is it used to classify organisms?

Using the number of changes in molecules

(e.g. DNA, RNA, Proteins) as an estimate of when evolutionary events happened.

17.3: Modern Classification

Above the level of kingdom is something called a domain. Name the three domains,

describe characteristics of and give examples of organisms in each domain.

13. - 15. Domain Bacteria

small, single-celled, prokaryotic (no

nucleus) usu. with cell wall, reproduce by binary fission

e.g. bacteria (staph, strep, E. coli), Kingdom Eubacteria

16. – 18. Domain Archaea

small, prokaryotic, autotrophic (make

own food) and chemosynthetic, live in harsh environments, distinct cell membranes

e.g. Archaea (that’s what they’re all

called)

Kingdom Archaebacteria

19. – 21. Domain Eukarya

eukaryotic (have nucleus, organelles)… that’s the only thing they have in common!

e.g. plants, animals, fungi and protists

(single celled organisms)

Describe the characteristics and give examples of the following kingdoms:

22. - 23. Kingdom Protista

Eukaryotes that are not plants, animals or

fungi…a mish-mash of what’s left over and doesn’t fit anywhere else

e.g. seaweed, amoeba and paramecia

24. - 25. Kingdom Fungi

eukaryotic, heterotrophic (eat food),

uni/multicellular, absorb (rather than digest) food

e.g. yeast, mushrooms, molds

26. - 27. Kingdom Plantae

eukaryotic, multicellular, autotrophic (make

own food, except for a few spp)

e.g. daffodils, trees, ferns, moss, green

peppers

28. - 29. Kingdom Animalia

eukaryotic, multicellular, heterotrophic

e.g. people, otters, sponges, jellyfish,

platypus