Alive or Not?
Why Classify
Linnaean & Binomial
Structural Features
Dichotomous Keys
100

In MRS GREN, what does the M stand for?

Movement

100

What word means putting living things into groups based on what's similar about them?

Classification

100

Name one of the seven levels used in the Linnaean classification system.

One of: Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species

100

What do we call the physical features, like body shape or parts, used to help classify an organism?

Structural features

100

What do we call a tool that uses yes/no questions to identify a living thing?

A dichotomous key

200

Name two of the seven MRS GREN signs of life.

Any two: Movement, Respiration, Sensitivity, Growth, Reproduction, Excretion, Nutrition

200

Give an everyday example of sorting things into groups (not in science).

e.g. supermarket products, library books, clothes in a wardrobe

200

Name all 7 levels of classification in order

Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species

200

Name one structural feature you could use to tell if an animal is a mammal.

Fur or hair, or that they feed their young milk

200

Name the two types of dichotomous keys we used in class.

A branching flowchart and a series of paired statements

300

A car can move and needs fuel. Why isn't it alive?

It doesn't grow or reproduce, and it isn't made of cells — it doesn't do all the life processes

300

How can classifying a newly discovered organism help scientists learn about it?

If it fits into a group with similar organisms, scientists can predict things about it based on its relatives, like what it eats or how it behaves

300

In a binomial naming system, what parts make up the scientific name?

Genus and species. 

300

Give one structural feature you could use to tell a bear apart from a dog

Any reasonable answer: e.g. size, skull shape, coat, ear shape, teeth

300

How many choices are usually given at each step of a dichotomous key?

Two

400

What is the difference between something that is 'dead' and something that has 'never been alive'?

Dead = it used to be alive but isn't anymore. Never alive = it never did any life processes, like a rock

400

Give one reason classification is useful to scientists.

It makes it easier to study living things and share information clearly

400

Name two kingdoms of life

E.g., Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Bacterium, Protista, Archaea

400

Would you expect two organisms found in the same phylum to be more or less similar than two organisms in the same genus?

Less similar than genus - down the classification system = more similar. So species is most similar, kingdom is least.

400

Why are dichotomous keys useful when surveying living things in a habitat?

They help you identify something you don't already know, just by looking at its features

500

A seed on a shelf isn't moving, growing or reproducing. Is it alive, dead, or something else? Explain your answer.

It's alive but dormant — it can still grow and reproduce once it gets water and warmth

500

What could go wrong if scientists around the world didn't use the same classification system?

It could cause confusion — the same living thing might get different names in different places

500

The dingo's scientific name is Canis lupus dingo, and the dog's is Canis lupus familiaris. What does sharing the genus “Canis” tell us about these two animals?

They are closely related and share many similar features, since organisms in the same genus are close relatives

500

Explain why comparing structural features is important when classifying a newly discovered organism.

It helps scientists group the new organism with similar ones and work out its likely place in the classification system, even without genetic testing

500

Two students use the same dichotomous key on the same animal but end up naming it as two different species. Give one possible reason why this happened.

They likely misread or misjudged a feature at one of the steps and picked the wrong choice, leading them down different paths in the key