Key ideas of 'Classification'.

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Note on Key ideas of 'Classification'., created by imogen garrett on 30/08/2014.
imogen garrett
Note by imogen garrett, updated more than 1 year ago
imogen garrett
Created by imogen garrett about 10 years ago
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Key ideas of 'Classification'. 

All living things have seven characteristics: reproduction, nutrition, respiration, growth, excretion, movement and sensitivity.  Living organisms are classified into groups according to how closely related they are. Each species of an organism is given a unique two-word Latin name called a binomial. The first word of the binomial is the genus and the second word is the species.  Vertebrates are classified into five classes: fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. They each have their own distinctive set of features. For example, amphibians have a smooth skin, fish and reptiles have scales, birds have feathers and scales, and mammals have hair.  Arthropods are invertebrates with jointed legs and segmented bodies. They can be further classified into arachnids, myriapods, insects and crustaceans.  Annelids are worms with unsegmented bodies but no legs.  Nematodes are worms with unsegmented bodies. Molluscs have unsegmented bodies, and often have a shell.  Bacteria are single-celled organisms whose cells do not have nuclei.  Fungi includes moulds, mushrooms, and toadstools. They have cells with cell walls but do not photosynthesise. Viruses are not generally considered to be alive at all. They are not made of cells and cannot carry out any of the characteristics of living things on their own.  Flowering plants can be classified into monocotyledonous plants and dicotyledonous plants. Monocots have seeds with one cotyledon, and their leaves often have paralleled veins. Dicots have seeds with two cotyledons, and their leaves generally have branching veins.  A dichotomous key is a set of paired contrasting descriptions which lead you through to the identification of an unknown organism. 

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