Question | Answer | |
A puritan clergyman who lived in england and discovered taxonomy | John Ray | |
A distinct type of organism | Species | |
The Father of Taxonomy | Carlous Linnaus | |
classification system | kingdom,______, ______, order ,______,_______, specie | Phylum,class,family,genus |
Always consist of its genus and species name, with the genus name listed first | Scientific Name | |
The primary basis for classifying living things is... | Bady Structure | |
Those with vascular system | Tracheophytes | |
Without a vascular system | Bryophytes | |
Tiny one-celled reproductive structures that will eventually produce new plants | Spores | |
Most unique seedless plants | Fern | |
Chloryphyll-containing stems that carry on photosynthesis instead of its tiny green leaves | Horsetail | |
Bears spores in clubshaped conelike structures | Club Moss | |
Which can survive in every climate of the world, often form a lush, green coating on moist surface | Mosses | |
Tiny hairlike threads that absorb water and nutrients | Rhizoids | |
Have the same ody structure as mosses | Liverworts | |
Animals with backbones | Vertebrates | |
Animals without backbones | Invertebrates | |
Belong to phylum Annelida and include earthworm and leaches | Segmented worms | |
Rows of bristle | Setae | |
Belong to phylum platyhelminthes | Flatworm | |
Organisms that live in or on other organisms and obtain nutrients from them | Parasites | |
Belong to phylum Nematoda | Roundworms | |
Family that includes clams, oisters,snails ,slugs, and octopuses | Mollusks | |
used for locomotion | foot | |
containing internal organ | Viseral hump | |
skinlike organ | mantle | |
all of which are marine animal, include starfish, sea urchins,and san dollars | Echinoderms | |
Jellyfish, sea anemones, and corals | Coelenterates | |
Extend from the coelenterate's body to capture its prey | Tentacles | |
It is the only multicellular animal without a nervous system | Sponges | |
Vertebrae Mammals (class) | Mammalia | |
The mammals different characteristics | | |
The science of classification | Taxonomy | |