Mechel Golenberke: My First Website
Chapter 18 Classification
Big Idea: The Unity & Diversity of Life
Miller Levine Chapter 18 Textbook
Chapter 18 Study Workbook – all with vocab review
Chapter 18 Vocabulary Interactive Crossword
Chapter 18 Vocabulary Crossword – web print
Chapter 18 Vocabulary Crossword - pdf
Chapter 18 Vocabulary Crossword – key
Taxonomy: Life's Filing System - Crash Course Biology #19
Hank tells us the background story and explains the importance of the science of classifying living things, also known as taxonomy.
Extra Credit: Biology Junction Taxonomy PowerPoint (38) & Questions (82) (BioJunction Taxonomy Crossword)
DAY 1
Classification Overview (4:26)
In Biology, classification is the way to organize living things based on evolutionary relationships. Traditionally, we organize species into the standard hierarchy of kingdom, phylum, class, order, family and genus.
18.1 Finding Order in Diversity (18.1 PowerPoint)
à pairs read through lesson summary
à create a concept map of the nine bolded words plus the term “species”
Describe the goals of binomial nomenclature & systematic
Identify the taxa in the classification system devised by Linnaeus
Kim Brown Taxonomy PowerPoint to review (1-19) & introduce dichotomous keys (20-28)(28 slides)
Homework: 18.1 Study Workbook 8.1 only: (all of chapter 18)
DAY 2
Prepare a classification scheme of some objects
Place these objects into kingdoms, phyla & classes
Give names to each kingdom, phyla & class
DAY 3
Practice together using a dichotomous key – classification of aliens
Lab 32: Using And Making a Biological Key
Use a key to identify fourteen shark families
Study the method used in making statements of a key
Construct your own key which will identify organisms appearing on page 128
DAY 4
18.2 Modern Evolutionary Classification (18.2 PowerPoint)
à pairs read 18.2 lesson summary
à study 5 vocabulary – quick quiz
Explain the difference between evolutionary classification & Linnaean classification
Describe how to make & interpret a cladogram
Explain the use of DNA sequences in classification
Homework:18.2 Study Workbook 18.2 only: (all of chapter 18)
Cladistics:
(Tutorial) Laptop Lab: How to Build a Cladogram – do together
http://ccl.northwestern.edu/simevolution/obonu/cladograms/Open-This-File.swf
Short Cladogram Labs (worksheets)
à biology corner cladogram analysis
à How to Make a Cladogram (a little harder)
A phylogenetic tree is a branching diagram that shows evolutionary relationships. These trees, often compared to family trees, are constructed using a variety of evidence generally using DNA. In phylogenetic trees, sometimes the lengths of the branches represent time since a group split from each other.
Cladistics is the method of classifying organisms into groups called clades. Clades consist of an ancestor organism and all of it's decedents and one branch is the tree of life. Cladograms are diagrams that show relationships within a clade.
Check out on your own…Understanding Evolution: http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/evo_03
Day 5
Computer Lab: What Did TRex Taste Like?
(teacher lesson plan) (student page) TRex Lesson Document: - BETTER WORKSHEET: What did a T-Rex Taste Like?
DAY 6
18.3 Building the Tree of Life – 18.3 lesson overview 25 slides
à pairs read 18.3 lesson summary
Name the six kingdoms of life as they are currently identified
Explain what the tree of life represents
18.3 & Chapter Review Study Workbook
Vocab Review only: (all of chapter 18)
Like the Animal Kingdom, the Plant Kingdom is also a major part of the Linnaean system of classification that includes organisms like trees, bushes and grasses. The plants in this kingdom can be called autotrophs because they perform photosynthesis to provide food for themselves. These organisms also provide oxygen for humans and animals to survive.
Unlike the organisms of the Archaea or MoneraKingdoms, the Animal Kingdom consists of multi-cellular, heterotrophic organisms that feed on other organisms to survive. Some of the characteristics of the animals in this kingdom are being able to develop throughout their lives, move independently and reproducing.
The protist kingdom is a classification that includes a diverse group of eukaryotic organisms. Typically, protists reproduce asexually via mitosis and range from unicellular to multicellular organisms. In the protist kingdom, there are two main groups: protozoa (which are generally heterotrophic) and algae (which are generally autotrophic). Organisms in the protozoa group include things like amoebas, slime molds and paramecium while common organisms in the algae group include green algae, brown algae, diatoms and euglena.
The Fungi Kingdom consists of plant-like organisms with small nuclei such as yeast, bread mold and mushrooms. Many of the organisms in theFungiKingdom can cause disease, but some are helpful as they are used to make things like antibiotics and yeast. Most of the organisms in this kingdom are parasitic and receive nutrients from surfaces they live on.
The Bacteria Kingdom, formerly called monera, are single celled prokaryotic organisms. Bacteria encompass two domains: eubacteria and archaea. Eubacteria and archaea have very different cell walls. They are also distinguished by their DNA - the DNA of archaea has histone proteins while that of eubacteria does not.
Discovery Education – “LIFE” series narrated by Oprah Winfrey
Life Series: Discovery Education – go here for assigned videos & login
Username: golenberke Password: biology
LIFE: Birds (43:34)
LIFE: Challenges of Life (43:49)
LIFE: Creatures of the Deep (43:50)
LIFE: Fish (43:34)
LIFE: Hunters and Hunted (43:36)
LIFE: Insects (43:52)
LIFE: Mammals (43:29)
LIFE: Plants (43:42)
LIFE: Primates (43:33)
LIFE: Reptiles and Amphibians (43:31)
LIFE: The Making of LIFE (43:53)
Six Kingdoms of Life Activity – quick shockwave activity
go through 60 pages at end of text: diversity of life – fill out biodiversity chart
Coloring Pages: 6.5 The Classification Scheme, 6.6 The Five Kingdoms
Crash Course
Old & Odd: Archaea, Bacteria & Protists - CrashCourse Biology #35
Hank veers away from human anatomy to teach us about the (mostly) single-celled organisms that make up two of the three taxonomic domains of life, and one of the four kingdoms: Archaea, Bacteria, and Protists. They are by far the most abundant org...
The Sex Lives of Nonvascular Plants: Alternation of Generations - Crash Course Biology #36
Hank introduces us to nonvascular plants - liverworts, hornworts & mosses - which have bizarre features, kooky habits, and strange sex lives. Nonvascular plants inherited their reproductive cycle from algae, but have perfected it to the point wher...
Vascular Plants = Winning! - Crash Course Biology #37
Hank introduces us to one of the most diverse and important families in the tree of life - the vascular plants. These plants have found tremendous success and the their secret is also their defining trait: conductive tissues that can take food and...
The Plants & The Bees: Plant Reproduction - CrashCourse Biology #38
Hank gets into the dirty details about vascular plant reproduction: they use the basic alternation of generations developed by nonvascular plants 470 million years ago, but they've tricked it out so that it works a whole lot differently compared t...
Fungi: Death Becomes Them - CrashCourse Biology #39
Death is what fungi are all about. By feasting on the deceased remains of almost all organisms on the planet, converting the organic matter back into soil from which new life will spring, they perform perhaps the most vital function in the global ...
Simple Animals: Sponges, Jellies, & Octopuses - Crash Course Biology #22
Hank introduces us to the "simplest" of the animals, complexity-wise: beginning with sponges (whose very inclusion in the list as "animals" has been called into question because they are so simple) and finishing with the most complex molluscs, oct...
Complex Animals: Annelids & Arthropods - CrashCourse Biology #23
Hank continues our exploration of animal phyla with the more complexly organized annelida and arthropoda, and a biolography on insects. Like CrashCourse on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: http:/...
Chordates - CrashCourse Biology #24
Hank introduces us to ourselves by taking us on a journey through the fascinatingly diverse phyla known as chordata. And the next time someone asks you who you are, you can give them the facts: you're a mammalian amniotic tetrapodal sarcopterygian...
Animal Behavior - CrashCourse Biology #25
Hank and his cat Cameo help teach us about animal behavior and how we can discover why animals do the things they do. Like Crash Course on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/youtubecrashcourse Follow Crash Course on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com...
Chapter 18 Test
Kim Brown Bio 2
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