Module 4: Classification and Phylogenetics

These free OCR A Level Biology Classification and Phylogenetics revision notes have been written for specification point 4.2.2(d).

Classification

Classification is the process of placing organisms into groups.

Classification helps scientists to:

  • Identify and name organisms
  • Predict shared characteristics
  • Organise biological knowledge
  • Understand evolutionary relationships

Organisms can be classified by:

  • Observable characteristics such as limbs or flower colour.
  • Cellular features such as the presence of a nucleus.
  • Molecular traits such as DNA and RNA sequences.
  • Physiological processes (e.g. respiration type)

Artificial vs Natural Classification

The table below outlines the characteristics of artificial and natural selection:

FeatureArtificial ClassificationNatural Classification
Based onA selection of observable traitsA wide range of characteristics with a focus on genetic evidence
Reflects evolutionary history?Cell icon NoCell icon Yes
StabilityRelatively constantChanges with new molecular data
ExampleGrouping plants by leaf shapeGrouping by DNA sequence similarity
Natural Classification: Molecular Evidence

Natural classification emphasises the classification of organisms based on their evolutionary relationships and common ancestry using the following molecules:

MoleculeUse in ClassificationExample Use
DNACompares gene sequences to reveal evolutionary relationshipsComparing conserved genes like Hox or 16S rRNA
RNA – rRNA used for ancient divergence
– mRNA to study gene expression
– 18S rRNA for eukaryotes, 16S for prokaryotes
– mRNA profiles in related species
ProteinCompares amino acid sequences for functional similarityCytochrome c (respiratory protein) sequence comparison in animals
The Taxonomic Hierarchy

Taxonomic ranks (also known as taxonomic levels) are hierarchical groups into which organisms are sorted (hierarchical classification) to reflect their relative ‘closeness’ to each other.

Binomial nomenclature (also known as the binomial system) is a two-part naming system that uses the genus and species names from the taxonomic hierarchy to produce a unique two-part name for identifying a species.

Each organism is given a two-part Latin name:

Genus (capitalised) + species (lowercase)

e.g. Homo sapiens

The binomial name is traditionally written in italics, but is commonly underlined when handwritten.

The advantages of the binomial naming system included:

  • Universality: Latin was the common language (of the time), avoiding confusion across different languages, and even within different regions of the same country.
  • Precision: Identifies a single species without ambiguity.
  • Relationships: Including the genus shows the evolutionary relationships between species.

The table below outlines the groups you need to recall at each taxonomic level:

RankGroups
Domain – Bacteria (Kingdom: Eubacteria)
– Archaea (Kingdom: Archaebacteria)
– Eukarya (Kingdoms: animals, plants, fungi, protists)
Kingdom – Animalia (animals)
– Plantae (plants)
– Fungi (mushrooms, yeasts)
– Protoctista (also known as Protista or protists) (unicellular eukaryotes)
– Eubacteria (‘true’ bacteria)
– Archaebacteria (‘ancient’ bacteria)*
Phylum Not expected to recall, but hopefully familiar with:
– Chordata (vertebrates)
– Arthropoda (insects, spiders, crustaceans)
Class Not expected to recall, but hopefully familiar with:
– Mammalia (mammals)
– Insecta (insects)
– Reptilia (reptiles)
– Aves (birds)
– Amphibia (amphibians)
Order Not expected to recall, but hopefully familiar with:
– Primates (apes, humans)
– Carnivora (dogs, cats, bears)
Family Not expected to recall, but hopefully familiar with:
– Hominidae (great apes)
– Felidae (cats)
– Canidae (dogs)
– Muridae (mice)
Genus Not expected to recall, but hopefully familiar with:
– Homo (humans)
– Canis (dogs, wolves)
– Felis (cats)
Species Not expected to recall, but hopefully familiar with:
– Homo sapiens (humans)
– Canis lupus (grey wolf)
– Felis catus (domestic cat)

*Archaebacteria is a misleading name, as Eubacteria appear to be the older evolutionary lineage.

You are expected to know and place organisms in the correct Domain and Kingdom with some provided information, but you do not need to recall the groups of the lower ranks beyond expected general knowledge (which has been included in the table for convenience).

A commonly used mnemonic to recall the order of these ranks is:

Dear King Philip Came Over For Good Soup


The Five Kingdoms System

The 5 Kingdoms system was the 1960s taxonomic system that arose from centuries of research:

KingdomFeatures
AnimaliaNo cell wall, heterotrophic, motile, multicellular
FungiChitin cell wall, saprophytic, extracellular digestion
PlantaeCellulose cell wall, autotrophic, multicellular
ProtoctistaMostly unicellular, some plant-like or animal-like
Prokaryotae*No nucleus, unicellular, peptidoglycan cell wall

*Not to be confused with the term prokaryote/prokaryotic, which describes a cell without membrane-bound organelles, not what kingdom it belongs to.

At this point in time, archaea had not been discovered/recognised yet, and the domain level of classification had not been invented.

The features used to classify organisms into the ‘correct’ Kingdom are outlined in the table below:

FeatureAnimaliaPlantaeFungiProtoctistaProkaryotae*
Cell typeEukaryoticProkaryotic
NucleusPresentAbsent
DNALinear chromosomes with histonesLoop of naked DNA
Membrane-bound organellesPresentAbsent
Ribosomes80s75s
ReproductionSexual and/or asexualAsexual
Unicellular or multicellularMulticellularUnicellular (e.g. yeasts) or multicellular (e.g. mycelium)Mostly unicellular (some multicellular algae)Unicellular
Cell wallNoneYes (cellulose)Yes (chitin)Some (peptidoglycan)
NutritionHeterotrophicAutotrophicHeterotrophicAutotrophic or heterotrophic
MobilityMost canCan’tSome can

*These features do not apply to the archaea, whose discovery ended the 5 Kingdoms system.


The Three-Domain System

By 1990 Carl Woese’s research had revealed significant differences between organisms within the 5 Kingdom’s prokaryotae group.

Structural differences between the bacteria and archaea can be found in their:

  • Cell membrane
  • Cell wall
  • DNA replication
  • Flagella
  • Genetic material (bacteria lack histone-like proteins)
  • RNA synthesis (they have different enzymes)

The structural similarities between the archaea and eukarya include:

  • DNA replication (similar mechanisms and enzymes)
  • Genetic material (both have histone-like proteins)
  • RNA synthesis (similar enzymes/RNA polymerase)

The differences observed between bacterial and archaea cells, and the similarities shared between the archaea and eukaryotes, provided substantial evidence that the archaea were more closely related to the eukaryotes than bacteria are. This insight led Woese to propose the 3 domain system above the traditional kingdom ranks which, after initial opposition, was widely accepted.


Phylogeny

Phylogeny is the study of evolutionary relationships between organisms.

Phylogeny defines a species as a group of organisms that are very similar genetically (and subsequently), metabolically, physiologically and anatomically.

This definition avoids many of the problems with the traditional definition of a species, which does not apply to asexually reproducing organisms.

Phylogenetics is a scientific field of research that determines and reconstructs the evolutionary relationships between organisms.

These relationships are often shown as phylogenetic trees:

Phylogenetic tree of marine organisms showing evolutionary relationships - OCR A Level Biology revision
  • Tips: present-day species
  • Nodes: common ancestors
  • Closer branches: more recent common ancestor
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