Domain of Life
Eukaryota
Eukaryota:The Eukaryota include the organisms that most people are most familiar with - all animals, plants, fungi, and protists. They also include the vast majority of the organisms that paleontologists work with. Although they show unbelievable diversity in form, they share fundamental characteristics of cellular organization, biochemistry, and molecular biology. Shown here, clockwise from upper left: a dinoflagellate, a single-celled photosynthetic protist; a palm tree representing the plants; a spider, one of the animals; and a cluster of mushrooms representing the fungi
aProtista
'Protist' defined as single celled organism-Some are multicellularAll protist are aquaticLive in moist terrestrial environmentsSome parasiticSome exists in moist tissueAre diverse in structureHeterotrophic (cannot manufacture its own food) or Autotrophic (self-feeding)Motile ( ability of an organism to move independently)Large, complex cells with many organelles
Plant-like
Most recognizable of the plant like protist are the green algaeDifference between the various classes are mostly based upon the type of chlorophyll present and the structure of the cell wallIt is an Autotrophs (produces complex organic compounds from simple substances present in its surroundings, generally using energy from light or inorganic chemical reactions) aka. self-feeding
Chlorophyta
Green AlgaeMovements are none Chlorophyll A and B gives them their bright green colourclosely related to vascular land plants
dEuglenoids
When a prey comes comes in contact.Peristaltic waves pass along the elastic pellicle resulting in a limited form of locomotion aka euglenoid movement_____________________________________________________________________Has both animal and plant characteristics
dRhodophyta
Red Algae Non-Motile movement (not capable of movement) of spores or microorganism Used in common food like sushi or chocolate milk, pasta and etc.
dAnimal-like
They are heterotrophs -an organism that cannot produce its own food, relying instead on the intake of nutrition from other sources of organic carbon, mainly plant or animal matterThey are Motile (having the power to move spontaneously)
Sporozoan
PlasmodiumAll parasiticNon-Motile (not capable of moving)Relies on other organism to distribute themLives in a gut of female mosquito that causes malaria or bloodstream of certain animals
dZooflagellates
TrypanosomaSingle Flagellum tailHelicopter roterSymbiotic rels with termitesMove by beating a long whip like flagellaDon't ingest whole food
dCiliates
ParameciumCilia allows them to move quicklyused to propel and direct food towards mouth opening Single celledContractile vacuole that helps get rid of excess water
dSarcodines
Ameoba Proteus - moves slow so they prey slow moving organismPseudopods (tool to capture prey and extensions of cytoplasm or inside organism)Encircling foodWrap around + fuse (joins together)Lysosome breaks down food
dFungus-like
Very similar to fungi -Especially in terms of nutrition and appearance saprophytic heterotrophs (digesting food externally and then absorbing it)
Acellular Slime Molds
Red Raspberry Slime Mold
Myxamoebae slime Mold
Cellular Slime Molds
Water Molds
Fungi
Eukaryoticchemoheterotrophic - Cannot produce their own food and must absorb itreproduce thru sporesBoth sexual and asexualNot motilealternation generationcell walls composed of chitinsSome fungi acts as a parasite and feeds on living things, usually doing some degree of harm Parasitic fungi uses enzymes to break down tissues
Zygomycota
Common MouldThey are mostly terrestrial in habitat, living in soil or on decaying plant or animal material. Some are parasites of plants, insects, and small animals, while others form symbiotic relationships with plants.ex. bread moulds
Bread Mould
Ascomycota
Sac FungiAscomycota (sac fungi) in which sexually produced spores (ascospores), usually four or eight in number, are formedEx. Yeast, truffles, morels
Yeast
Yeasts are eukaryotic, single-celled microorganisms classified as members of the fungus kingdom.
Truffles
Morels
Basidiomycota
Club FungiBasidiomycota are filamentous fungi composed of hyphae (except for basidiomycota-yeast; refer yeast for more information) and reproduce sexually via the formation of specialized club-shaped end cells called basidia that normally bear external meiospores (usually four). Ex. Mushrooms and Club Fungi
Mushrooms
A mushroom, or toadstool, is the fleshy, spore-bearing fruiting body of a fungus, typically produced above ground on soil or on its food source
Club Fungi
Deuteromycota
Imperfect fungiThe Deuteromycota are characterized by production of septate mycelium and/or yeasts, and a sexual life cycle that is either unknown or absent.ex. Penicillium, parasitic fungi, fungi that causes disease like athletes foot
penicillium
Parasitic fungi
uses enzymes to break down tissues
Athlete's foot
Plantae
Plants:multicellularPhotosynthetic –Contain chlorophyll a and bAlternation of Generationsdevelop from embryos –arise from multicellular structures in the maternal tissueproduct of sexual fusion -indicating that all plants (even though this is not actually true) have a sexual stage at some point in their life cycleUse chlorophyll to produce their own food
Non-Vascular Plants
Without water flowing vessels Non-FloweringSpore bearingThree phyla are traditionally called bryophytes the gametophyte is the dominant portion of the life cycle plants appear leafy but lack true stems, roots or leaves they lack vascular tissue they are all limited in size, most are no larger than 20 cm tall generally found in moist habitats 'Ex. mosses, liverworts, and hornworts
dBryophyta
means "mosslike plant"appears as a thick, velvety green carpet on moist rocks, trees, and groundmade up of individual moss plan
dMosses
No roots Non-vascularCannot transport fluids through their bodiesNeed moisture
dHepaticophyta
Liveworts
a small flowerless green plant with leaflike stems
dAnthocerophyta
Hornworts
Hornworts are a group of non-vascular plants
dVascular Plants
Flowering Plants
Seed Plants
gametophyte is much reduced The gametophytes are not free-living–retained within the reproductive tissues of the sporophytePollination replaces the sperm cell swimming to the egg–Drought-resistant pollen is carried to the female tissues by wind or animals. The zygote is protected in a seed–The seed can be dispersed, unlike the zygote of non-seed plants
dAngiosperms
Flowering Plants –reproduction takes place within the flower. sporophyte is the dominant–gametophytes are microscopic
dAnthophyta
Flowering Plants
Dicot
Monocot
Gymnosperm
are seed plants adapted to life on landtend to conserve waterIncludes roots, xylem and phloemVascular and have seedsnaked seeds.–seed is not covered with a fleshy fruit.sporophyte produces both male and female conesfour phyla
dConiferophyta
Conifers
Reproduce from seeds instead of sporesSeeds are nakedNever have flowersHave adaptation to survive in cold weather thin leaves, needles
Cycadophyta
Cycads
typically have a stout and woody trunk with a crown of large, hard and stiff, evergreen leaves
dGnetophyta
Gnetophytes
Ginkophyta
Ginkgo
Seedless Vascular
vascular tissuemoist habitatshave leaves called frondssporophyte is the dominant part of the life cycles gametophyte is much reduced The gametophytes are not free-living–retained within the reproductive tissues of the sporophytePollination replaces the sperm cell swimming to the eggDrought-resistant pollen is carried to the female tissues by wind or animals. The zygote is protected in a seed–The seed can be dispersed, unlike the zygote of non-seed plants
dPterophyta
Vascular Plant Produces by spores
Fern
With rootsVascular SystemTransports fluidMain PhylumHave gametophyte and sporophyte
dWhisk ferns
horsetails
Lycophyta
oldest lineages of extant vascular plants and contains extinct plants
Club mosses
Animalia
Animals are defined as:heterotrophic diploid multicellular usually (except sponges) develop from a blastula - multicellular embryo that develops from diploid zygote produced by fertilization of a large haploid egg by a smaller haploid sperm, is unique to animals.
Porifera
MulticellularNo mouthHeterotrophicWithout true tissueSpongesAsymmetrical- lacking symmetryLook like plants Collar cell- creates wave to pull foodReproduce *Releases sperm+eggEx. Sponges
dSponges
Can be sessile - do not moveand get food by filter feeding
Cnidaria
True tissueTentacles Basic tissue layers in the embryo-oragan + tissue-ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm2 tissue layersRadial symmetry - symmetry around a central axis2 body forms •Medusa (cup) •polyp (vase)Cnidocytes (stinging cells)Nematocysts (prickly barbs)Gastrovascular cavity (digestion)
dAnthozoa
True corals
Anemones
Sea Pens
Cubozoa
Box jellies
complex eyes and potent toxins
Hydrozoa
most diverse group
Hydroids
Fire corals
Scyphozoa
True jellyfish
Platyhelminthes
Can be free living or parasiticBilateral symmetry (2) with a head and a tailCephalization (has a head)Centralized nervous systemNo circulatory system and no hard skeleton
Flatworms
Can move in 2 ways either by cilia or muscle cells
Nematoda
Unsegmented wormsBilateral symmetryPseudocoelom ("false coelom")body cavity contains organsComplete digestive tract
Roundworms
worm grows in intestine of human host a forms cysts in the muscles
Annelida
Digestive tract Body segmentationCoelomClosed circulatory system
Polychaete
Earthworm
Oligochaete
Leech
Mollusca
Body planshellsfootcoelommantleProtostomes (anus first and mouth develops from blastopore)
Gastropod
Have a radula
Snails
Slugs
Cephalopod
Fast moving and intelligent predatorsExcellent visionFoot modified into tentaclesMove by jet propulsionthe concentration of sense organs, nervous control, etc., at the anterior end of the body, forming a head and brain, both during evolution and in the course of an embryo's development.
Octopus
Bivalves
Two-part shellsNo headPowerful foot to burrow
Clams
Oyster
Scallops
Arthropoda
Chelicerates
Six pair of appendages Chelicerae and pedipalps mouth parts No mandibles and no antenna Ex. Spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites, harvestmen and etc.
Arachnida
2 body segment8 LegsNo antenna or wingsEx. Spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites,
Merostomata
Pycnogonida
Acari
Scorpionidae
Aranae
Hexapoda
Body divided into head, thorax, abdomenUniramous appendages One pair of antenna (unbranched)Most with wings3 pair of walking legsGo from larva to adult
Insecta
Entognatha
Crustacea
Large and diverse groupCharacterized by having mandibles and compound eyes, biramous appendagesMostly living in aquatic habitatsBiramous appendages Ex. Crabs, shrimps, lobsters, crayfish, and etc
Malacostra
Brachiopoda
Ostracoda
Maxillopoda
Myriapoda
Elongated segmented body with numerous paired, jointed legs, formerly classified as a class comprising the centipedes and millipedesMany legsEx. Millipede, Centipedes
022
Deuterostomes (mouth first and anus develops from blastopore)Radial - 5 part symmetryBilateral symmetry as a larva (2)Vascular skeleton
dChordata
Dorsal nerve cordNotochordPaired gill slitsPosy-anal tailDeutreusome
Vertebrates
Animals have backboneanterior part of the dorsal hollow nerve cord is enlarged into a brainhead, neck, and trunkpresence of a tailA jointed internal skeletonTwo pairs of appendages
Gnathostomata
Jaw
Pisces
Chondricthyes
cartilaginous fishes: they are jawed vertebrates with paired fins, paired nares, scales, a heart with its chambers in series, and skeletons made of cartilage rather than bone.
Shark
Osteichthyes
bony fish
dCatfish
Tetrapoda
•The amniotic egg• Internal Fertilization• Water tight Skin• Other Adaptations
Mamalia
• Presence of hair• 4 chambered heart• Mammary glands on females (lactation)• 3 middle ear bones• Viviparous• Endothermic
Monotreme
•Egg layers• Spiny Anteater, Duck Billed PlatypusWarm bloodedproduces milkDo not give birth to live youngKeeps the eggs for the longer period - to provide nutrients to the egg
Echidna
Marsupials
•Small immature fetusGive birth to live youngMammals have pouch where their young grows and develops
Kangroo
Plancental Orders
Young nourished by placenta
Mice
Aves
ability to survive on land
Sparrow
Peigon
Reptilia
ability to survive on land
Alligator
Snake
Garden Lizard
Amphibia
Larvae heart 2 chambered,Adult heart 3 chamberedGills. lungs and skin used in respiration
Frog
Toad
Salamander
Agnathans
No jawsSucks tissue + bloodNo hinged jawnotochord persists into the adult animal
Cyclostomata
Lamprey
Tunicates
motile larvae display the chordate characteristicssessile (immobile) adult retains the pharyngeal apparatus
Urochodate
Cephalochordates
Filter feedersbiologists believe the ancestors of vertebrates resembled these animals
Bacteria
Bacteria lack a membrane-bound nucleus and other internal structures and are therefore ranked among the unicellular life-forms called prokaryotesmicroscopic single-celled organisms
Eubacteria
ProkaryoteCell walls with peptidoglycanUnicellularHave been classified by shapeLike archaebacteria, eubacteria are complex and single celled. They are the kinds found everywhere and are the ones people are most familiar with. Most eubacteria are helpful. Some produce vitamins and foods like yogurt. However, these eubacteria, Streptococci pictured above, can give you strep throatEx. Staphylococcus,Salmonella
Coccus
Spherical
dBacillus
Rod shaped
Spirillum
Spiral
Archaea
Archaea constitute a domain of single-celled microorganisms. These microbes are prokaryotes, meaning they have no cell nucleus.
Archeabacteria
ProkaryoteCell walls without peptidoglycanUnicellularArchaeans include inhabitants of some of the most extreme environment on the planetArchaebacteria are found in extreme environments such as hot boiling waterand thermal vents under conditions with no oxygen or highly acid environmentEx. Thermoplasma acidophilum
dCoelom (Body Cavity)
Acoelomate
No body cavity Platyhelminthes Flatworm
Pseudocoelomate
"False"There is a body cavity but not realSuspended body cavity -Changes depending on how they are relying
Coedom
True body CavityOrgans are held together by a mesentry