Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Classification
- Groupings
- Kingdom
- Phylum
- Class
- Order
- Family
- Genus
- Species
- lepard, tiger
- felines, pumas
- dogs, bears
- rodents, wales
- reptiles, amphibia
- snails, sponges
- Their Charectoristics
- unicellular
- single cell
- multicellular
- made of many cells
- autophically
- natural feeding using photosynthesis
- heterotrophically
- eating and digesting other organisms
- saprophytically
- eating and digesting outside the body
- nucleus
- controls the cell
- autotrophic
- makes own food
- hetrophic
- ingest other organisms
- saphrophytic
- digests organisms outside the body
- chordata
- animals with a backbone,spinal chord leading to the brain
- homothermes
- warm blooded, can adapt to weather
- poikilothermic
- cold blooded, cant change to adapt to climate
- oviparous
- lays eggs
- viviparous
- birth to live young
- discontinuous
- can only fit in a limeted number of catagorys
- continuous
- can have any value within a range
- Kingdoms
- Animalia
- multicellular, autotrophic feesers, no chlorophyll, no cell walls, complex cell structure with nucleus
- Plante
- multicellular,autotrophic feeders using chlorophyll, cell walls made of cellcose,complex structure with nucleus
- Fungi
- multicellular, cell walls not made of cellcose
- Types
- Reptiles
- breathe with lungs, poikilothermic, oviparous,internal fertilisation
- mammals
- breathe with lungs, homothermes, internal fertilisation, viviparous
- fish
- breathe with gills, poikilothermic , external fertilisation , oviparous
- amphibians
- lungs, homotheres, internal fertilisation, oviparous
- Hyybrids
- animals of the same specis breed together to make fertile offspring
- different species can create hybrids which are infertile
- organisms show many variattions which can make classification difficult
- not all hybrids are sterile
- Bionical Names
- normally written in latin
- eg, ursus arctus
- first part = species
- second part = genus
- shared genus shows theyre closely related allowing them to reproduce
- easier for scientists to not get confused with common names