Classification
Classification
Y7 SCIENCE
WHY SORT?
WHY DO WE CLASSIFY?
▪ Classification puts organisms into groups by looking at characteristics
(traits) they share.
WHY AND HOW DO WE CLASSIFY?
▪ To make it easier to communicate with other people
▪ Giving an object, substance or organism a name ensures
everyone knows what they are discussing
▪ Identify similarities and differences of the object, substance or
organism to the group
TAXONOMY & TAXONOMISTS
▪ Scientists who specialise in grouping and naming living things are
known as taxonomists.
▪ The science of grouping and naming things is called taxonomy.
▪ Classifying living things into groups based on their body
structures (anatomy), DNA or other traits.
DICHOTOMOUS KEYS
▪ Characteristics of organisms can be used to develop a key
▪ A key can then be used to identify unknown organisms
▪ Dichotomous key is the simplest type of key which means ‘cut in two’: a
series of choices that leads to the identification of an object
▪ Flow charts or tables can be used to write keys
LIVING VS NON-LIVING THINGS – MRS
GREN
What are the characteristics that could be used to classify living
organisms from non-living things?
▪ movement
▪ respiration
▪ sensitivity
▪ growth
▪ reproduction
▪ excretion
▪ Nutrition
LIVING ORGANISMS
▪ What are the characteristics that could be used to classify living
organisms?
TASKS
▪ WS MRS GREN
▪ Unit Review
▪ Activity Book
6.3 6.4
COMPARE THESE ORGANISMS
Finch Budgie
Structural
Similarities Differences
• Birds • Shape/size of beak
• Size • Colour of feathers
• Have feathers • Size of eyes
• Hard beak • Length of tail (?)
• Number of eyes, wings, legs
COMPARE THESE ORGANISMS
Turtle
Octopus
Function
Similarities al Differences
• Both are marine • Turtle can live on land
• Both can swim • Octopus can eject ink
• Both have sight/vision • Octopus can camouflage
• Both can walk • Octopus reproduce once only
CHARACTERISTICS FOR CLASSIFICATION
Structure Function
• Wings • Swim
• Fins • Fly
• Gills • Breathe oxygen in water
• Shape of beak
• Number of tentacles
• Shape of body
TAXONOMY
CAROLUS LINNEAUS
▪ Swedish botanist, lived 1707-1778
▪ invented binomial nomenclature,
the 2-word naming system we still
use today to classify organisms
▪ called “the father of taxonomy.”
BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE
• Gives a unique 2-word, Latin, scientific name to all living things
• Genus is capitalized; species is not; both are italicized
• Examples:
▪ Its common name can be: pill bug or rolly polly or potato bug.
▪ Common names for the same species can be different and confusing.
▪ Binomial Nomenclature uses Latin (a “dead” unchanging language) that
is understood by scientists worldwide.
▪ Its scientific name: Armadillidium vulgare
8 TAXA OF CLASSIFICATION:
1. Domain
2. Kingdom
3. Phylum
4. Class
5. Order
6. Family
7. Genus Binomial name or
8. Species Scientific Name
DOMAINS
▪ Prokaryotes – Bacteria and Archaea
▪ Eukaryotes – All other organisms
8 TAXA OF CLASSIFICATION:
DOMAIN
ACRONYM FOR THE 8 TAXA OF
CLASSIFICATION:
▪ "Do Keep Ponds Clean Or Fish Get Sick.“
• Domain
• Kingdom
• Phylum
• Class
• Order
• Family
• Genus
• Species
OR …..
▪ "Diverse Kids Prefer Carrots Over Fresh Green Spinach.“
With over 250,000 species, the plant kingdom is the second largest kingdom.
Without plants, life on Earth would not exist.
Plants feed almost all the heterotrophs (organisms that eat other organisms)
on Earth.
KINGDOM – ANIMALS
The animal kingdom is the largest
kingdom with over 1 million known
species.
1. Eubacteria
Eubacteria are complex and single celled.
(largest animal
phylum)
RESEARCH TASK – PREPARE A POSTER
▪ Choose one phylum or class from the animal or plant kingdom
and prepare a poster to identify the differentiating features of
the category.
Chordates
• All vertebrates belong to the same phylum, the chordates.
• Chordates have a nerve cord running down their backs.
• Most chordates have skeletons inside their body (an
endoskeleton), and most have small bones (known as
vertebrae and together they are called the vertebral
column or backbone) protecting the nerve cord.
• A group of chordates that has a backbone is called the
vertebrates.
• All chordates have bilateral symmetry.
Commonly
called fish
Cytoplasm
Cell
membrane
Cell wall
Nucleus
chloroplast
INDIGENOUS
CLASSIFICATION
TASKS
▪ Pearson Textbook
6.3 Unit Review: Q1 – 13 (p. 256)
▪ Pearson Textbook
Indigenous Classification (p.264-265)
Answer Review questions 1 – 7
▪ Activity Book
6.7 6.8 6.9
Classification of the Monotremes
Environment Without
backbones
Mammals Marsupials
Birds Placental
Chordates With
backbones Amphibians
(Vertebrates)
Reptiles Agnatha
Fish Chondrichthyes
Molluscs
Poriferans
Environment
Cnidarians
Invertebrates
(without backbone)
Echinoderms
Living
Annelids
Non-living
Nematodes
Platyhelminths
Mosses &
Liverworts
Cycads
Plants Ferns
Ginkgo
Seed
Producing
Conifers
Flowering
Plants