Skip to main content

Chapter-2 biological classification ( concepts ) class 11

History of classification

  • Aristotle, the Greek philosopher, classified animals based on whether they live on land, in water or in the air.
  • Charles Darwin put forward the idea of evolution in 1859, in his book, The Origin of Species.
  • Ernst Haeckel, Robert Whittaker and Carl Woese have tried to classify living organisms into broad categories, called kingdoms.
  • Carolus Linnaeus classified all the living organisms into two kingdoms namely, Plantae and Animalia.
  • Robert Whittaker, in 1969 proposed Five kingdom classification of living organisms.
02

DEFINITION
Moneran characteristics of bacteria
  • Habitat - Monerans are found everywhere in hot springs, under ice, in deep ocean floor, in deserts and on or inside the body of plants and animals.
  • Nutrition - Autotrophs, heterotrophs, parasitic, symbiotic, commensalism, mutualism. 
  • Respiration in these organisms vary, they may be obligate aerobes, obligate anaerobes and facultative anaerobes.
  • Circulation is through diffusion. 
  • Movement is with the help of flagella.
  • Reproduction is mostly asexual, sexual reproduction is also seen. Asexual reproduction is by binary fission, sexual reproduction is by conjugation, transformation and transduction.
03

DEFINITION
Bacteria
Structure
  • They are larger than viruses.
  • They have organelles, cell wall, cytoplasm, and cell membrane.
Characteristics
  • Some bacteria are infectious while some are beneficial. 
  • They are unicellular prokaryotes.
Examples
  • Staphylococcus bacteria, Rhizobium bacteria etc.
04

DEFINITION
Size and shape of bacteria
The bacteria are usually of four types on the basis of shape:
  • Cocci (spherical bacteria) 
  • Bacilli (rod-shaped bacteria)
  • Spirilla (spiral or twisted bacteria)
  • Vibrio (comma-shaped)
05

DEFINITION
Eubacteria
  • It is a bacterium of a large group typically having simple cells with rigid cell walls and often flagella for movement. 
  • The group comprises the true bacteria and cyanobacteria, as distinct from archaea.
06

DEFINITION
Methanogen
  • Methanogens are microorganisms that produce methane as a metabolic byproduct in anoxic conditions.
07

DEFINITION
Reproduction in bacteria
Reproduction
  • Sexual reproduction in bacteria mainly occurs by transformation, transduction and conjugation.
  • Asexual reproduction by means of binary fission and sporulation.
08

DEFINITION
Characteristics of Mycoplasma
  • Mycoplasmas or PPLOs are distinct group of prokaryotes. 
  • Their occurence was demostrated by D. Iwanowsky in 1892. 
  • They are characterized by the absence of cell wall. 
  • Mycoplasma cell is delimited by a delicate cell membrane, of successive layers of protein, lipid and proteins, and contains a long double stranded molecule of DNA and RNA granules.
09

DEFINITION
Diseases caused by Mycoplasma
  • They cause diseases like Aster yellows, Little leaf of brinjal and Mulbery dwarf.
10

DEFINITION
Symptoms and infections caused by Mycoplasma
In humans, Mycoplasma causes pneumonia, joint infection, post patrum fever, chorioamnionitis, urethritis etc. In cattle, it causes pleuropneumonia.
Pneumonia
  • It can be transmitted through airborne droplets from a cough or sneeze.
  • When it enters the respiratory tract it multiplies and starts asymptomatic infection.
  • On sever condition, it produces symptoms such as fever, headache, sore throat, cough, sputum with blood, chest pain and even death due to cardiac failure.
11

DEFINITION
Properties of Mycoplasma
Nocard and Roux discovered the Mycoplasma. It causes pleuropneumonia in cattle and thus, called as Pleuropneumonia like Organisms (PPLO).
The properties of Mycoplasma are as follows:
  • They are the smallest cell with 125-250nm in size.
  • They lack the cell wall and thus, morphology is not fixed.
  • They possess the bacillary and spiral body with filaments and granules.
  • They grow in cell-free media that contains lipoprotein and sterol.
12

DEFINITION
Treatment and prevention of disease caused by Mycoplasma
The disease can be diagnosed by the staining method of specimens. Specimens can be isolated from sputum, blood, throat swab and respiratory excretion.
Treatment
  • Antibiotics are used to treat the disease e.g., tetracycline and erythromycin.
  • Medicin: Fluoroquinolone.
Prevention
  • Avoid close contact with infected person.
  • The mouth should be covered while coughing or sneezing.
13

DEFINITION
Archaebacteria
  • Archaebacteria are ancient group of bacteria living in extreme environments.
  • They are characterized by possessing cell walls without peptidoglycan.
  • The lipids in their plasma membrane are branched differing from all other organisms.
  • They are categorized into methanogens, halophiles and thermoacidophiles.
14

DEFINITION
Methanogens
  • They are strict anaerobes.
  • They occur in marshy areas and convert formic acid and carbon dioxide into methane with the help of oxygen.
  • For example, Methanobacterium, Methanococcus.
15

DEFINITION
Halophiles
  • They are aerobic chemoheterotrophs.
  • They occur in salt rich substrata like salt pans, salt beds and salt marshes.
  • For example, Halobacterium, Halococcus.
16

DEFINITION
Thermoacidophiles
  • It is an archaebacteria that thrive in strongly acidic environments at high temperatures.
  • They often live in hot sulphur springs.
  • For example, Thermoplasma, Thermoproteus.
17

DEFINITION
Kingdom Protista
  • Unicellular or multicellular, eukaryotic, autotrophic or heterotrophic organisms.
  • Most of the protists live in water, some in moist soil or even the body of human and plants.
  • Movement is often by flagella or cilia.
  • For example, AmoebaEuglenaParamecium etc.
18

DEFINITION
Structure of Protista
  • Cell is surrounded by plasmalemma.
  • It contains organelles like mitochondria, Golgi complex, endoplasmic reticulum, 80S ribosomes etc.
19

DEFINITION
Types of protists
The kingdom Protista has been broadly divided into three main groups.
  • Photosynthetic Protists: They include dinoflagellates, chrysophytes and euglenoids.
  • Slime moulds
  • Protozoan Protists: They include flagellated protozoans, amoeboid protozoan, sporozoans and ciliated protozoans.
20

DEFINITION
Photosynthetic protists
Dinoflagellates
  • Most of them are marine but some occur in fresh water.
  • Some show bioluminescence.
  • Nutrition is photosynthetic.
  • For example, Glenodinium.
Chrysophytes
  • They include diatoms and desmids.
  • For example, SpirogyraCymbella.
Euglenoids
  • Occur in fresh water and damp soils.
  • Nutrition is holophytic.
  • For example, EuglenaPhacus.
21

DEFINITION
Slime moulds
  • They do not have chlorophyll.
  • At one stage of the life cycle they have amoeboid structure.
  • They exhibit wide range of colouration.
  • They have phagotrophic nutrition.
  • Reproduces both sexually and asexually.
22

DEFINITION
Benefits of Protozoa
Protozoa is a unicellular organism found in water. Some have an irregular shape (Amoeba) whereas some have a definite shape (Paramoecium).
Benefits of Protozoa:
a) They are useful for cleaning of dirty water by the process of decomposition.
b) They are useful in scientific research.
c) They are useful in the food chain and especially used as a food for animals.
23

LAW
Protozoa
Structure
  • They have cell membrane and nucleus.
  • They do not contain chlorophyll.
Characteristics
  • They are unicellular animals.
  • Some protozoa may enter our stomach and cause illness.
Example
  • Amoeba, paramecium
24

DEFINITION
Kingdom Fungi
  • Non-green, multicellular, eukaryotic, heterotrophic and saprophytic organisms.
  • Made up of tough complex sugar called chitin.
  • Most of them are made up of thread like hyphae rather than cells.
  • Reproduction in fungi is both by sexual and asexual means.
  • For example, yeast, moulds, mushrooms. Most common moulds (fungi) are Aspergillus and Penicillium.
25

DEFINITION
Types of phycomycetes
Phycomycetes is divisible into two groups, oomycetes and zygomycota.
Oomycetes
  • The mycelium is coenocytic.
  • Asexual reproduction involves formation of spore containing sacs.
  • Gametes are usually nonflagellate.
  • Sexual reproduction is by gametangial contact.
  • For example, Phytophthora, Albugo.
Zygomycota
  • The fungal group Zygomycota is most frequently encountered as common bread molds, although both freshwater and marine species exist.
  • Most of these live on decaying plant and animal matter found on the substrate.
  • They are usually recognized by their profuse, rapidly growing hyphae, but some exhibit a unicellular, yeast-like form of growth.
  • Asexual reproduction is by means of spores produced in sporangia borne on the hyphae. 
  • For example, Mucor, Rhizopus (the bread mould) and Pilobolus
26

DEFINITION
Discovery of virus
  • The virus was first discovered by the Iwanoski in 1892 while studying tobacco mosaic disease. It was later proved by the Beijerinck.
  • W.M. gave the name tobacco mosaic virus to the tobacco mosaic disease-causing agent.
27

DEFINITION
Viruses
Structure
  • A virus has simple structure without cytoplasm or organelles.
  • It has covering of proteins.
  • It contains DNA and RNA.
Characteristics:
  • They live inside host cell.
  • They can be cultured on living tissue.
  • They are highly specific.
Example
  • AIDS virus
28

DEFINITION
Characteristics of virus
  • Presence of only DNA or RNA.
  • Capacity to produce from the sole nucleic acid.
  • They do not show cell division.
  • They use the metabolic machinery of the host cell to replicate.
29

DEFINITION
Structural components of virus
A simple virus particle (virion) consists of a nucleic acid core of genetic material, enclosed within a protein coat (capsid). In general,
  • All plant viruses have single-stranded RNA
  • Animal viruses have single or rarely double-stranded RNA or double-stranded DNA, and 
  • Bacterial viruses (bacteriophages) contain mostly double-stranded DNA but can also have single stranded DNA or RNA.
30

DEFINITION
Viruses and bacteria
The difference between viruses and bacteria are as follows:
VirusesBacteria
Very small (visible only by electron microscope)Larger (can be seen by light microscope)
Non-cellular.Single-celled.
Have no metabolism.Have metabolism.
Neither grow nor divide.Grow in size and divide to produce more bacteria.
Can be crystallized.Cannot be crystallized.
Command the host cell to produce virus.Self reproduce.
All produce disease in man, animal and plants.Some harmless, some useful and some disease producing.
31

DEFINITION
Viroids
  • Viriods are small single-stranded circular RNA agents which infect plants.
  • They differ from RNA viruses in three major aspects: their minute size (they are non-quarter of the size of the smallest RNA virus, i.e., 250-400 bases); the genome does not encode any proteins and they are not encapsidated. 
  • Viroid infections is mediated mechanically.
32

DEFINITION
Difference between virus and viriods

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Chemical coordination and integration contact 22

01   DEFINITION Diagrammatic representation of hormones produced in Human body Diagrammatic representation of the various endocrine hormones produced by the glands and tissues in a human body. 02   DEFINITION Endocrine glands Endocrine glands are glands of the endocrine system that secrete their products, hormones, directly into the blood rather than through a duct.  The major glands of the endocrine system include the pineal gland, pituitary gland, pancreas, ovaries, testes, thyroid gland, parathyroid gland, hypothalamus and adrenal glands. 03   DEFINITION Hormones from anterior pituitary gland Hormones from anterior pituitary gland are as follows: Growth hormones: Promote growth of whole body, particularly of the skeleton. Thyroid stimulating hormone: Stimulates thyroid to secrete thyroxine. Adrenocorticotropic hormone: Stimulate adrenal cortex. Gonadotrophic hormone: Regulates the activity of gonads...

NCERT solution

(1) Identify the correct sequence of taxonomical categories? (a) Species - Order - Phylum - Kingdom (b) Genus - Species - Order - Kingdom (c) Species - Genus - Order- Phylum SOLUTION (a) and (c) represent correct sequences of taxonomic categories as the correct hierarchical arrangement of taxonomic categories in ascending order is Species → Genus → Family → Order → Class → Phylum → Kingdom In sequence (b), species should have been followed by genus. Therefore, it does not represent the correct sequence.                               Concept 01   DEFINITION Hierarchical of classification groups Carolus von Linnaeus created a hierarchical classification system using seven taxonomic categories. Kingdom - Top most taxonomic category. Phylum - Term used for animals while its synonym division is used for plants. Class - One or more than one order makes a cl...

Chapter 5 Morphology of Flowering Plants

01 DEFINITION Root Roots help to absorb water. In tap root, the secondary root emerges from the primary root. In fibrous root, the primary root and secondary root emerges from the same point. 02 DEFINITION Modifications of roots Roots are the part of the plant which is mainly used for support and anchorage of plants. Some of the roots like carrot and radish are modified to perform a special function like storage of food. The food stored in the roots is utilized during unfavorable conditions. Roots like Rhizophora, are modified for gaseous exchange. They have minute pores which help to exchange gases. Stilt roots provide mechanical support to the plant e.g., sugarcane. Climbing roots provide aerial support to the plant e.g., vanilla.  Clinging roots provide mechanical support to the plants e.g., orchids. Sucking roots helps to withdraw nutrition from other parts of the plant e.g., cuscuta. Floating roots help the aquatic plants to sto...