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Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion...

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Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3
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Page 1: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Diversity of Life

Chapter 4, Section 3

Page 2: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Evolution overview

• All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell

• Then one billion years ago organisms that are made of many cells appeared as a result of evolution

• During evolution traits that do not help organisms survive disappear while good traits that help with survival remain

Page 3: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Classification

• As a result of evolution earth is populated by many different organisms with different traits.

• We group these organisms according to their similar characteristics

• Classification – grouping and naming of organisms according to their evolutionary relationships and shared characteristics

Page 4: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Tree of Life

Page 5: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Organisms are classified into based on:

Page 6: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

1.Cell Typea. Prokaryotes

b. Eukaryotes

Page 7: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Prokaryotic Cell Eukaryotic Cell

Page 8: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

2. Number of Cellsa. Unicellularb. Multi-cellular

Page 10: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Multicellular

Page 11: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

3. Cell Structure

Page 12: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

4. Mode of Nutritiona.Autotrophs- Chemoautotrophs - Photoautotrophs

b.Heterotrophs

Page 13: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

3 Domains of Life • Domain Bacteria

–Eubacteria• Domain Archae

–Archaebacteria• Domain Eukarya

–Protists, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia

Page 14: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Three Domain System    

Domain Eukarya - includes organisms composed of eukaryotic cells (plants, animals, fungi, protists – 4 kingdoms)

Domain Bacteria - includes all prokaryotic cells from Kingdom Eubacteria

Domain Archaea – prokaryotic cells, includes only "ancient" bacteria, Archaebacteria (1 kingdom)

Page 15: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

6 Kingdoms of Life

• Archaebacteria

• Eubacteria• Protist

• Fungi• Plant• Animal

Page 16: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Kingdom Fungae

•Multicellular (most), some unicellular (baker's

yeast)

•Heterotrophic (mainly decomposers)

•Eukaryotic

Photos by

nutmeg66

Page 17: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

FungiPlay an important role in breaking down the bodies of dead organisms.

Recycle matter, nutrients

Fungi are not the only decomposers (worms, bacteria)

No decomposers = no life = no cycling of materials = organisms won't have the building blocks to grow and reproduce

Page 18: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Kingdom Protista

•Most are unicellular

•Can be heterotrophic (Ameba) or autotrophic

(Algae)

•Eukaryotes (all have nucleus)

•Most live in water

Photo of Ameba by PROYECTO

AGUA **/** WATER PROJECT

Page 19: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Kingdom Eubacteria & Kingdom

Archaebacteria

•Unicellular

•Can be autotrophic or heterotrophic

•Prokaryotes (do not have a nucleus)Eubacteria = common bacteria

(E. coli, Salmonella)

Archaebacteria = “ancient

bacteria”, exist in extreme

environments

Page 20: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Archaea and Bacteria

• Archaea differ from bacteria in their genetics and the makeup of their cell wall.

• Bacteria are microscopic, unicellular organisms that usually have a cell wall and reproduce by cell division.

• Unlike all other organisms, bacteria and archaea lack nuclei.

• Bacteria and archaea live in every habitat on Earth, from hot springs to the bodies of animals.

Page 21: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Bacteria and the Environment• Some kinds of bacteria break down the remains

and wastes of other organisms and return the nutrients to the soil.

• Others recycle nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus.

• Certain bacteria can convert nitrogen from the air into a form that plants can use. This conversion is important because nitrogen is the main component of proteins and genetic material.

Page 22: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Bacteria and the Environment

• Bacteria also allow many organisms, including humans, to extract certain nutrients from their food.

• The bacterium, Escherichia coli or E. coli, is found in the intestines of humans and other animals and helps digest food and release vitamins that humans need.

Page 23: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Kingdom Plantae

•Multicellular

•Autotrophic

•Eukaryotic

•Cannot move

(due to cell walls)

Page 24: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Plants

• Mosses – example of plants with no vascular tissue (can not transport water inside the plant) – live near water or in humid areas, can't grow tall

• Vascular Plants – transport water fro roots all the way to the top of the plant – can grow tall, no need to be near water

Page 25: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Vascular Plants

• Gymnosperms – cone bearing plants – naked seed – seeds are not enclosed

• Angiosperms – flowering plants – greatest number of plants on Earth – seeds are enclosed in a ........ fruit; flower serves to attract pollinators

Page 26: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Kingdom Animalia

•Multicellular

•Heterotrophic

•Most can move

•Examples: birds,

insects, worms,

mammals, reptiles,

humans, anemones

Photo by Eduardo Amorim

Photo by Tambako the

Jaguar

Page 27: Diversity of Life Chapter 4, Section 3. Evolution overview All life on earth began about 3.5 billion years ago with organisms that were a single cell.

Animals

• Invertebrates are animals that do not have backbones (insects, squid, horseshoe crab).

• Vertebrates are animals that have a backbone, and includes mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish. Only Birds and mammals are warm-blooded.


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