Classification of living things

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David Holt
Classification of living things

The classification of living beings is carried out in 8 levels, from lowest to highest evolutionary specificity, each of the groups being called a taxon (taxa in the plural):

  • Domain
  • Kingdom
  • Edge
  • Class
  • Order
  • Family
  • Gender
  • Species

The criteria for the classification of living beings is based on various characteristics:

  • morphology: the shape of your body;
  • genetics: similarities in the composition of the DNA sequence;
  • metabolism: the chemical reactions they carry out to obtain energy;
  • growth: the pattern of how organisms develop.

The science in charge of the classification of living beings is in charge of the Systematic, who orders the great diversity of existing organisms on Earth. The taxonomy is the analysis of the characteristics of an organism with the purpose of assigning it to a taxon.

Species

The subspecies of the dog Canis lupus familiaris presents different races or varieties.

The species is the basic unit of biological classification. It is characterized by:

  • Morphologically similar individuals.
  • Genetic background with great similarity.
  • Ability to interbreed or mate with each other.
  • Production of fertile offspring.

Species in turn can be subdivided into subspecies and varieties. For example, the dog Canis lupus familiaris it is a subspecies of the wolf Canis lupus. In turn, we know that there are hundreds of varieties or breeds of dogs, with particular characteristics.

Gender

The genus is the taxonomic category that groups similar species. For example, gender Vespa includes at least 22 species, characterized by being black, yellow and brown wasps that build their nests by chewing wood fibers.

The genus can be subdivided into subgenera and infragenus. In addition, the genus name is part of the scientific name of the organism; we can make the analogy that gender is the surname of the living being, for example, Homo sapiens is the scientific name of the human species, where Homo is the gender.

Families

Families are made up of genera with some distinctive characteristics. Its name in botany ends as "-aceae ", for example the family of Fabaceae (legumes). In zoology, the ending for the family taxon is "-idae", for example, the feline family is Felidae.

Order

The order is the taxonomic category that groups the families. There may also be suborder, infraorder and parvorden.

Among the orders, we can highlight:

  • Hymenoptera: includes the set of insect animals that have membranous wings, such as bees, wasps and bumblebees.
  • Carnivorous: includes animals that eat meat, such as dogs, cats and bears.
  • Mucorales: is the largest order of fungi, where bread mold is found Rhizopus stolonifer.
  • Poales: order of plants where corn, bamboo and bromeliads are found.

Class

The class is the taxonomic category that groups the orders. They can be subdivided in turn into subclass and underclass.

In plants, the class designation must end with "-opsida", such as Magnoliopsida (dicots) and Liliopsida (monocots). The ending in fungi is "-mycetes" and in algae "-phyceae". For animals and bacteria there is no specific ending: Mammalia, Insecta.

You may be interested in seeing the difference between monocots and dicots..

Edge or division

The edge or division groups beings with a distinctive characteristic. Each kingdom encompasses a diversity of edge. It can be subdivided into sub-phylum, infra-phylum and microfilm..

For example, in the Animalia kingdom the most emblematic phyla are:

  • Chordata: animals that have a notochord or dorsal chord, such as vertebrates.
  • Arthropoda- Arthropods with jointed legs, such as crabs, butterflies, and dragonflies.
  • Mollusca: mollusks with soft bodies, such as squid.
  • Porifera: pore sponges.
  • Platyhelminthes: flatworms or flatworms.
  • Nematoda: roundworms.
  • Annelida: worms with small rings, such as earthworms.
  • Echinodermata: echinoderms with spiny skin, like starfish.

In the kingdom of plants and fungi the category of Division.

Kingdom

There are currently six kingdoms:

  • Animalia Kingdom: animals.
  • Kingdom Plantae: mosses, ferns and plants.
  • fungi kingdom: fungi, molds and yeasts.
  • protist kingdom: eukaryotic protozoa.
  • Kingdom Archaeabacteria: microorganisms without a nucleus that live in extreme environments.
  • Kingdom Eubacteria: includes bacteria.

You may be interested in seeing the kingdoms of nature.

Domain

Domain is the highest level of classification, proposed by Carl R. Woese et al. In 1990, based on differences in ribosomal RNA. From here three domains are derived:

  • Eukarya: which concentrates eukaryotic organisms, made up of cells that have a nucleus.
  • Archaea: group of prokaryotic microorganisms, that is, they do not have a nucleus, which in the evolutionary line are more similar to eukaryotes.
  • Bacterium: prokaryotic microorganisms without a cell nucleus.

You may be interested in seeing the difference between Archeas and bacteria.

References

Woese, C.R., Kandler, O., Wheelis, M.L. (1990) Towards a natural system of organisms: proposal for the domains Archaea, Bacteria, and Eucarya. PNAS 87: 4576-4579.


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