This domain is the oldest and it can survive in extreme (hot or salty) environments.
Archaea
This kingdom is nicknamed the “junk drawer”
Protista
smallest unit of life
Cells
These are the two languages that the scientific name uses.
Latin & Greek
This is the levels of classification from
smallest to largest.
species, genus, family over, class, phylum, kingdom, domain
This is the domain that humans are in.
Eukarya
These are the four kingdoms of Eukaryotes
Plantae Animalia Fungi & Protist
what structure do multiple cells put together make
Tissues
The genus represents the larger group and the species represents the smaller more specific group. This is Linnaeus’ naming system
Binomial Nomenclature
This is the name for a living thing that must eat other things to obtain food. They cannot make their own.
Heterotrophs
These two domains are prokaryotic
Archaea & Bacteria
A mushroom, a flower, and a bunny are each in these different kingdoms.
Fungi, Plantae, Animalia
You brain is made up of brain tissues. The brain, Heart, Lungs, Kidneys what are they?
Organs
This is the name of the type of scientists that studies classification.
Taxonomist
This is the full name of the father of Taxonomy.
Carolus Linnaeus
Eukaryotes are made of this type of cells
Membrane bound cells with a nucleus
The kingdom Animalia is very different this is why they can be classified together
Heterotroph & Eukaryotic
This is the levels of organization from smallest to largest.
Cell, tissue, organ, organ system, organism
When writing the scientific name this part is always capitalized.
Genus
Explain how organisms are classified in the Linnaean system.
Organisms are classified in the Linnaean system using a hierarchical structure that includes categories such as kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species. broad to specific
This is why scientists added the 8th level of classification (Domains) to the top.
To show the difference between Archaea & Bacteria
Both of the prokaryotic domains have only one kingdom each. This is their names.
Eubacteria Archeabacteria
How do organs relate to organ systems?
Organs are made up of tissues and work together to form organ systems.
This is the advantage of using the scientific name instead of the common name.
Shared terminology across the world
What is the importance of classifying organisms in the study of biology?
to organize and understand the diversity of life?