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Some subdisciplines of biology use a basic
Linnaean type of taxonomy, but may change the basic names used for
a few of the groups. Commonly, for instance, plant and
fungus taxonomy uses the term Division instead of
Phylum. Recently, there has been a bit of a movement to revamp the
basic system to something called
phylocode. |
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HUMANS |
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KINGDOM: Animalia |
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KINGDOM: Plantae |
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KINGDOM: Mycota |
KINGDOM: Protista |
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Another set of rules, called binomial nomenclature (2-name naming), determines how species names are used. You'll see in the examples that species names are two words: a capitalized genus name and an uncapitalized specific. The second word has no meaning by itself, and is never capitalized, not even if a proper noun is used as the source of the term. Species names (and Genus names) are also treated as foreign words in English, meaning that they are italicized or underlined when printed or written. The names of other taxonomic groups are often not italicized or underlined, but that usage seems to vary. Typically, species names are abbreviated by making an initial of the
first word and spelling out the second - you may be familiar with
E. coli, the abbreviated name of Escherichia coli,
a common intestinal bacterium that, if introduced into an incompatible
intestine, can cause food poisoning. |
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As more and more people studied Nature in detail, it became obvious that a butterfly's wings were very different structures than a bird's wings. And sometimes, it could be seen that two structures used for very different functions - such as a human hand, a bat's wing and a whale's flipper - all contained the same internal architecture, with sometimes subtle changes in internal parts producing the outward changes. Traits with similar internal structure are called homologous traits, and it was eventually decided that these traits were a better measure of relatedness than analogous traits. Keep in mind, however, that traits can be both analogous and homologous (like a monkey hand and a human hand), it isn't automatically an either / or situation. One modern approach to classification is very focused on critical traits that arise and characterize a new family line - histories are based upon the spot in the past when a particular trait arises. This approach is called cladistics. Much basic taxonomy is still done anatomically, although the details used have gotten smaller through the use of microscopes and broader through the discoveries of genetics and biochemistry (yes, molecules have a sort of anatomy). These will be covered later as they come up in the historical journey. |
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Many advanced systems (mostly in the plant
and microbe areas) add a Domain level above the Kingdoms;
most commonly, there are three domains. The Monera and Archaea (seen
below as Kingdoms) are each Domains, with the rest of the Kingdoms in the Eukaryota
Domain. |
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By this definition, any group is supposed to be monophyletic, where every member can be traced from a single ancestor that can be included in that group. If this is not true, a group is said to be polyphyletic, which is a criticism; it implies that multiple groups that shouldn't be lumped together are being classified incorrectly. Keep in mind, like all aspects of classification, this fits into the convenience of human labeling, which doesn't always comfortably fit what the real organisms are doing. And with that fresh in mind... |
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Species: A group that, in natural surroundings, breeds exclusively within the group. In effect, we now let the organisms themselves determine what belongs to their species and what doesn't. This still is not a great definition - it says nothing about asexual species. And, like almost any biological definition, it still has exceptions, such as with coyotes, dogs, and wolves. But it works fairly well. Before long, there may be a strong
attempt to define species genetically based upon molecular differences.
This sounds simple and mathematical, but it isn't; don't expect a
reliable standard any time soon. |
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A book from 1866 on the classification of animals.
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Online Introduction to Biology (Advanced)
Copyright 2003 - 2011, Michael McDarby.
Reproduction and/or dissemination without permission is prohibited. Linking to these pages is fine.