37.3
Taxonomy, the science of naming groups of organisms based on shared characteristics, was first formally classified by Carolus Linnaeus in the 18th century.
He grouped organisms using a hierarchy of increasingly inclusive categories that are still used today. Similar species, the smallest unit of taxonomy, are grouped into the same genus.
For example, the Arctic hare and the jackrabbit are both grouped in the genus Lepus, but they have different species names. So they are named Lepus arcticus and Lepus californicus. This two-part format used to identify specific organisms is called binomial nomenclature.
Related genera belong to the same family. For example, hares and rabbits belong to Leporidae. This family shares the same order, Lagomorpha, with some other species, such as pikas.
These all belong to the class Mammalia, which includes animals characterized by mammary glands that produce milk, such as humans, polar bears, and squirrels.
Above class in the taxonomic hierarchy is the phylum. Vertebrate animals belong to the phylum Chordata, defined by the presence of a notochord, a flexible, rod-like structure found in chordate embryos. This phylum belongs to the kingdom Animalia.
Under modern classification, the highest taxonomic rank is the domain. One such domain, Eukarya, includes multiple kingdoms whose organisms have cells with a membrane-bound nucleus.
Taxonomy is the science of defining and naming groups of biological organisms based on shared characteristics. It uses a hierarchy of increasingly inclusive categories with Latin names. The smallest units of taxonomy, species and genus, are used to assign a formal, taxonomic name to each species in a system. This classification system, referred to as binomial nomenclature, was formalized by Carolus Linnaeus in the 18th century.
The hierarchy that Carolus Linnaeus first proposed is still used today, although it has been expanded upon. The order of ranking—from the highest or largest group to the smallest or most specific—is as follows: domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species.
Beginning from the smallest unit of taxonomy, similar species are grouped into the same genus. For example, the arctic hare and the black-tailed jackrabbit both belong to the genus Lepus; however, they belong to different species—arcticus and californicus, respectively. Within an organism’s taxonomic name, both the genus and species are italicized, and the first letter of the genus is capitalized. This two-part format for naming and categorizing specific organisms is referred to as binomial nomenclature.
Members of the same genus belong to the same family. For example, hares and rabbits belong to the Leporidae family. They also share the same order, Lagomorpha, with some other rodent species like pikas (Ochotonidae family), which resemble hares and rabbits but have smaller, rounder bodies and no visible tail. All the lagomorphs belong to the class Mammalia, which also includes monotremes like the platypus, marsupials like kangaroos, and placental mammals like goats, mice, and humans.
All vertebrate animals belong to the phylum Chordata and the kingdom Animalia. Finally, at the top of the hierarchy are the three domains. Eukarya includes all animals, plants, fungi, and protists. Archaea and Bacteria are prokaryotes—single-celled organisms without nuclei and other organelles.
Taxonomy, the science of naming groups of organisms based on shared characteristics, was first formally classified by Carolus Linnaeus in the 18th century.
He grouped organisms using a hierarchy of increasingly inclusive categories that are still used today. Similar species, the smallest unit of taxonomy, are grouped into the same genus.
For example, the Arctic hare and the jackrabbit are both grouped in the genus Lepus, but they have different species names. So they are named Lepus arcticus and Lepus californicus. This two-part format used to identify specific organisms is called binomial nomenclature.
Related genera belong to the same family. For example, hares and rabbits belong to Leporidae. This family shares the same order, Lagomorpha, with some other species, such as pikas.
These all belong to the class Mammalia, which includes animals characterized by mammary glands that produce milk, such as humans, polar bears, and squirrels.
Above class in the taxonomic hierarchy is the phylum. Vertebrate animals belong to the phylum Chordata, defined by the presence of a notochord, a flexible, rod-like structure found in chordate embryos. This phylum belongs to the kingdom Animalia.
Under modern classification, the highest taxonomic rank is the domain. One such domain, Eukarya, includes multiple kingdoms whose organisms have cells with a membrane-bound nucleus.
From Chapter 37:
Now Playing
Diversity, Classification & Evolution
71.5K Views
Diversity, Classification & Evolution
237.6K Views
Diversity, Classification & Evolution
119.3K Views
Diversity, Classification & Evolution
48.7K Views