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Biodiversity, Evolution & Disease
Classification and Evolution
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Created by
Imogen Stevens
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Cards (87)
What is the order of classification? (i.e. class, genus etc. in order)
Domain
,
Kingdom
,
Phylum
,
Class
,
Order
,
Family
,
Genus
,
Species
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What is the name of the groups of classification (i.e. class, genus etc.)?
Taxonomic
groups
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What were the traditional 5 kingdoms?
Animalia
,
Fungi
,
Protoctista
,
Plantae
,
Prokaryotae
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Who was the first to propose a modern system of classification and when?
Carl Linnaeus
in the 18th century, hence it being named
Linnaen Classification
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What is the binomial naming system?
Where we use the Genus and
Species
names (in that order) to identify a
species
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What is an advantage of using the binomial naming system?
It removes the language barrier between two scientists without a common
language
who wish to talk about the same
organism
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Can organisms in the same genus reproduce?
Yes
, but they only produce
infertile
offspring
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What is the infertile offspring of two organisms of the same genus called?
A
hybrid
, and has no
Latin
name
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When was the 6-kingdom model of classification with domains first introduced and by whom?
1977
by
Carl Woese
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What are 3 reasons that scientists classify organisms?
1. To identify
species
2. To predict
characteristics
3. To find
evolutionary
links
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What is one slight limitation of using a classification system?
The classification is created by
humans
instead of being defined by
nature
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What are some features of organisms from the Animalia kingdom?
Multicellular
, heterotrophic feeders, no chlorophyll, no cell wall, complex cell structure with
nucleus
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What are some features of organisms from the Plantae kingdom?
Multicellular, cellulose cell wall, autotrophic feeders using
chlorophyll
, complex cell structure with
nucleus
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What are some features of organisms from the Fungi kingdom?
Multicellular
, cell walls not made of cellulose, saprophytic feeders so no chlorophyll, complex cell structure with
nucleus
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What are some features of organisms from the Protoctista kingdom?
Mostly
unicellular
(a few multicellular), complex cell structure with
nucleus
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What are the 3 domains?
Eukaryotes
, Eubacteria,
Archebacteria
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Why are some hybrids infertile?
Because they have an
odd
number of
chromosomes
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What are some features of Eukarya?
Eukaryotic, bilipid cell membrane, membrane-bound organelles, contain
80S ribosomes
,
RNA Polymerase
has 12 proteins
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What are some features of Archaea?
Prokaryotic,
monolipid cell membrane
, no true organelles, extremophiles,
70S ribosomes
, RNA Polymerase has 8-10 proteins
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What cellular feature makes Archaea such good extremophiles?
Their
monolipid cell membrane
is very resistant to being
disrupted
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What are the main differences between Archaea and Eubacteria?
1. Archaea have no
peptidoglycan
in their cell wall
2. Different number of
proteins
in RNA Polymerase
3. Archaea have a
monolipid
cell membrane, Eubacteria have a
bilipid
cell membrane
4. Eubacteria are found in all environments whereas Archaea tend to be
extremophiles
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What are some features of Eubacteria?
Prokarotic,
peptidoglycan cell wall
, no true organelles,
70S ribosomes
, RNA Polymerase contains 5 proteins
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Why do scientists think Archaea were some of the earliest life?
They were extermophiles, and conditions on early Earth were very
hostile
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Are Archaea or Eubacteria more common?
Eubacteria
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What is a protein which indicates a shared ancestry between
primates
?
Haemoglobin- there is only 1 amino acid different
between humans and
chimpanzees
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Where do methanogens live and what do they do?
They live in anaerobic environments such as
sewage
treatment plants, and make
methane
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What are some examples of places that extremophilic Archaea live?
Anaerobic conditions, highly
acidic
environments and
hot
thermal vents
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What does a phylogenetic tree do?
Help us see relationships between
organisms
and
common ancestors
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What does it mean when a branch on a phylogenetic tree does not make it to the top of the diagram (i.e. the modern day)?
That the species is
extinct
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What causes variation within a species?
Random genetic mutations
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What is
interspecific
variation?
Variation
which occurs
between different species
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What is intraspecific variation?
Variation
which occurs
within
a species
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What is
continuous variation
?
Variation which can take any value
in
a given range
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What is
discontinuous
variation?
Variation
which can only take certain values within a given
range
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How do DNA mutations cause variation?
They can lead do different
proteins
being coded for, which would give rise to different
proteins
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What are the 3 genetic causes of variation?
1.
Sexual reproduction
mixing alleles from the two individuals'
gametes
2. Which alleles the
gametes
contain is down to chance during
meiosis
(assortment and crossing over)
3.
Mutations
to the
DNA sequence
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What is
phylogeny
?
The
evolutionary
relationships between
organisms
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What is phylogenetics?
The study of the evolutionary relationships between
organisms
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What does the
closeness
of the branches of a
phylogenetic
tree mean?
The closer the
branches
, the more closely related the
organisms
are
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How can classification use phylogeny?
To confirm that classification groups are
correct
, or that they need to be
changed
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