49
Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

  • View
    221

  • Download
    4

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Classification

The evolution of Complexity:

single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Page 2: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Aristotle to Linneaus

Taxonomy- classifying organisms

Binomial nomenclature and scientific names

Canis lupus, Turdis migratoris, Felis catus

Systematics- the study of biodiversity and its classification, create phylogenies

Phylogeny- an organism’s evolutionary history, a phylogenetic tree

Page 3: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Modern Classification System

• Domain Archea, Eubacteria, and Eukarya

• Kingdom Archeabacteria, Eubacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plant, Animal

• Phylum • Class • Order• Family• Genus First part of Scientific name• Species Second part of Scientific name

Page 4: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Origin of Life• Spontaneous Generation – Biogenesis• Oparin and Stanley Miller• Endosymbiosis

• What is a Virus?Genetic material surrounded by a protein

coat, must have a host cell in order to reproduce

Life cycles: Lytic (kills host cell) or Lysogenic (incorporates DNA into host)

Page 5: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

3 Domains

1. Archea2. Eubacteria3. Eukarya

Bacteria once belonged to the same Kingdom, but through Molecular Biology and the study of evolution, Biologist realized they had critical differences and should be placed into their own category so the “Domain” classification level was created.

Page 6: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

6 Kingdoms

Page 7: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Archea and Eubacteria

• Archea KingdomAll prokaryotic single celled organisms. No Peptidoglycan in cell wall Most ancient and extremeThey live in the harshest environmentsMethanogens (anaerobic),

thermoacidophiles (hot) and halophiles (salty)

• Eubacteria KingdomTrue bacteria, all prokaryotic single celledHave Peptidoglycan in cell wallClassified by their shape and gram staining

Page 8: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Shapes and Examples

• Sphere- Cocci, can occur in chains Streptococcus Pneumoniae which can cause strep throat or Scarlet fever, or grapelike clusters Staphylococcus aureus which can cause skin infections and Toxic Shock syndrome

• Rod- Bacillus ex Escherichia coli (E.coli), Lactobacilli which can cause tooth decay or one strain makes Sourdough bread, other bacilli can cause botulism, typhoid fever, and anthrax

• Spiral- Spirilla comes in 3 shapes 1. Vibro which is curved caused Cholera, 2. Spirillum (thick spiral), and 3. Spirochete (thin spiral) ex. Treponema pallidum causes Syphilis and another strain can cause Lyme disease

Page 9: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Essential Bacteria: ecosystems depend on these small organisms

• Cyanobacteria- photosynthetic/producers, building blocks of most aquatic food webs

• Nitrogen- Fixing Bacteria- symbiotic relationship with plants, they help them absorb nitrogen from the soil.

• Helpful: fermentation, digestion, biotechnology, nitrogen fixing, decomposers, oxygen producers

• Antibiotics kill bacteria by destroying the cell wall, gram negative have an extra lipid layer that prevents the antibiotics from entering the cell.

Page 10: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Review of Bacteria

All bacteria:• Reproduce asexually• Single celled• Have cell wall• Single strand of DNA

Some Bacteria:• Autotrophic • Heterotrophic• Some move by flagella,

slime, spiral motion• Some produce

endospores which allow them to go dormant during hostile conditions

• Some produce toxins

Page 11: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Kingdom Protista

• Kingdom of Mostly single celled organisms

• Categorized by their likeness to 3 other kingdoms

• All Eukaryotic some Autotrophic and some Heterotrophic

Page 12: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Algae- Plant like Protist

• Algae or Plant-like, Autotrophic, classified by pigment with no cell wall, come form elaborate colonies and multicellular structures (kelp and seaweed)

• Chrysophyta- Golden Algae ex diatoms• Pyrrophyta- bioluminescent/glow

ex. Dinoflagellates• Euglenaphyta- ex Euglena• Rhodophyta- red• Phaeophyta- brown, seaweed and kelp• Chlorophyta- green, ex Volvox, Spirogyra

Page 13: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Images of algae

• Volvox

• Spirogyra

• Red algae

• Seaweed

• Kelp

• Diatoms

Page 14: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Protozoa or Animal like Protist

Protozoa or Animal-like, classified by mode of movement• Sarcodina ex. Amoeba- move by pseudopodia

“false foot”• Ciliophora ex Paramecium- move by cilia, tiny

hairs• Zoomastigina ex Trypanosoma (African Sleeping

Sickness) moves by flagella

• Sporozoa, are the parasitic animal like protista, include Plasmodium which causes Malaria

Page 15: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Images of Protozoa

• Amoeba

• Paramecium

• Trypanosoma

Page 16: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Fungus-like Protista• Fungus-like are all

Heterotrophic with no cell wall, absorbing nutrients directly through cell membrane

• Include Plasmodium or Slime Molds and Downy Mildews

Page 17: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Kingdom Fungi

• All Eukaryotic, multicellular, heterotrophs (saprotrophs or detrivores living off dead and decaying organisms or decomposers), cell wall made of chitin (type of protein), and classified by reproductive structures.

• Fungi are important part of an ecosystem because they recycle nutrients/ decomposers

Page 20: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Kingdom Plante

• Multicellular, Eukaryotic, Cell wall made of cellulose, Autotrophs, not capable of movement, reproduce sexually some produce spores and others seeds.

• Most have vascular tissues which include roots, stems, and leaves, and specialized tissues called xylem and phloem.

Page 21: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Spore Producing Divisions of Plant

9 Divisions of Plants:Spore producers• Bryophyta only nonvascular plants, ex moss

and liverwort (gametophyte dominant stage of life cycle know as alternation of generations)

• Lycopodophyta ex. 1,000 species of Club and Spike moss

• Sphenophyta ex. 10 species of Horsetails• Filicinophyta ex 11,000 species of Ferns

(sporophyte dominant stage)

Page 22: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Spore producing plant images

Page 23: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Seed producing Divisions of Plants

• Gymnosperms: reproductive structure is the cone , “naked seed”– Cycadophyta 200 species of these tropical plants– Ginkgophyta 1 species remains the Gingko tree– Coniferophyta 600 species of conifers, pine, spruce, cypress, juniper,

fir– Gnetophyta 70 species of these arid/semi-desert dwelling plants

Angiosperms: reproductive structure is the flower, seeds are surrounded by fleshy or dry fruit that ripen to encourage animals to disperse the seeds.30,000 or more identified species

maple, hickory, oak, aloe, roses, tulips, dogwood, magnolia, corn, beans, tobacco, apple tree, pecan tree

Monocots – corn, grains, onion, with one seed leaf or cotyledon and parallel veins on the leaf

Dicots- beans, with two seed leafs and branched veins on the leaf

Page 24: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Seed plants

Page 25: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Seed producers- gymnosperms

“Cone Bearers”

Page 27: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Parts of a Flower

Page 28: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Dry and Fleshy fruits

Page 29: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Other Plant Info.

Symbiotic relations ships: Plants and BacteriaFlower patterns and scent attract pollinatorsFruits promote seed dispersal by offering a sweet

reward to animals.Plant Adaptations:• hormones that control, phototropism (light),

geotropism (gravity), and thigmotropism (touch) • specialized leaves (needles, spines, fuzzy,

waxy), specialized seed capsules (wind, float, food, wings, burrs, sticky)

Page 30: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Animalia

multicellular, eukaryotic, no cell wall, heterotrophs, capable of movement, reproduce sexually, body symmetry (radial or bilateral)

9 Phyla- 8 invertebrate and 1 vertebrate

Page 31: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Invertebrate- Poriferahttp://www.oceanicresearch.org/education/wonders/sponges.html

• Porifera- two cell layers, collar cells w/flagella, filter feeders, ex. sponges

Page 32: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Invertebrate- Cnidarianhttp://www.oceanicresearch.org/education/wonders/cnidarian.html

• Cnidarians- Stinging cells, radial symmetry, simple nervous system only stimulus and response, central cavity only one body opening, ex. jellyfish, coral, hydra, sea anemone

Page 33: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Invertebrate- worms

• Plathyhelmenthes: flat worms, only one body opening, three cell layers,ex. Tapeworm, Fluke, Planarian, Marine worms

• Nematode: round worms, first with two body openings, 3 cell layers, many parasitic, Heartworm, Roundworm, Vinegar Eel

• Annelid: segmented worms, two body openings, 3 cell layers, beginning of circulatory system, and digestive system (crop), ex. Earthworm and Leech

Page 34: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Worm images

• Tapeworm

• Liver fluke

• Marine flatworm

• Heart worm

• Earthworm

• Leech

Page 35: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Invertebrate Mollusk

• soft body, more complex body systems developing, eyes and nervous system, levels of communication beyond stimulus and response

3 classes • Gastropod (snails and slugs), • Cephalopod (squid octopus cuttlefish and

chambered nautilus), • Bivalve (oyster, clam, mussel, scallop)

Page 36: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Mollusk images http://www.oceanicresearch.org/education/wonders/mollusk.html

Snail

Slug

Octopus

Squid

Cuttlefish

Scallop

Page 37: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Invertebrate- Arthropod

• jointed legs, exoskeleton, body segments (head, thorax, and abdomen), metamorphosis (complete or incomplete)

4 classes:Insect -6 legs (ant, grasshopper, beetle, bee,

wasp)Arachnid -8 legs (spider, tick, horseshoe crab),Crustacean -10 legs (shrimp, lobster, barnacles,

crayfish)Myrapods -many legs, centipede and millipedes

Page 38: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Arthropod images

Page 39: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Invertebrate- Echinoderm

Characteristics: spiny skin, complex regeneration capacity, found only in marine environments, radial symmetry,

Examples: Sea urchin, Sand dollar, Starfish, Sea cucumber

Page 41: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Vertebrates- Chordata

Chordate notachord, complex body systems, sexual reproduction (internal or external fertilization) 5 classes:

Fish

Amphibians

Reptiles

Birds

Mammals

Page 42: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Fish

• Fish, moist skin covered in scales, gills to breathe, 2 chambered heart, cold blooded,

3 types:

1. bony ex Trout, Salmon, Bass, Catfish, Grouper, Tarpon.

2. jawless, ex. Lamprey and tunicates

3. cartilaginous ex. Sharks and Rays

Page 45: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Reptile

• Reptile, dry leathery skin with scales, cold blooded, 3 chambered heart, amniote/terrestrial eggs, ex. Lizards, snakes, turtles, alligator, crocodile

Page 46: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Birds

• Bird, warm blooded, 4 chambered heart, hollow bones, body with feathers

Page 47: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Mammal

• Mammal, warm blooded, 4 chambered heart, milk producers, body with hair/fur

• Placental (live birth) • Marsupial (pouch) ex. Kangaroo and Koala

• Monotremes (egg) ex Platypus and Echidna

Page 48: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Animal Behaviors

Innate: • Instincts- complex pattern of innate behaviors, reflexes, fight or flight,

courtships, species recognition (language, song, flashes of pattern/light)• Territory- physical space needed for breeding, feeding, and shelter,

organisms can expend a lot of energy defending territory some will fight to the death.

• Migration- instinctive seasonal movement, response to a changing environment, includes hibernation (cold) and estivation (dry and hot)

Learned:• Habituation- animal repeats a successful behavior, and does not repeat an

unsuccessful behavior, birds learn which moths are poisonous by color and avoid eating them after becoming ill or getting a bad taste. Deer return to the same grazing field when successful.

• Imprinting – salmon and turtles return to same stream or beach to lay eggs in which they hatched, the environment left an imprint or memory

Page 49: Classification The evolution of Complexity: single cell prokaryote to multicellular eukaryotes

Adaptations for Defense:

• Mechanical- physical structures• Chemical- stinging sensations, poisons,

bad taste, paralysis• Camouflage- color or pattern that blend

into environment– Disruptive- ex zebra– Cryptic- ex chameleon and squid– Countershading- ex Fish have light belly and

dark back