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Cladistic Taxonomy

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  Why do we classify organisms?  Is now well know to us.There are different schools of thought as for as the classification of the organisms is concerned. They include biological Taxonomy, Hierarchical Taxonomy, phenetic Taxonomy and cladistic taxonomy.  Cladistics  is what we will be dealing with, in the current blog. It is a a modern system of classification of organisms which takes into account many aspects in addition to morphological characters i.e. form which was a sole criterion for Linnaean classification. Origin of cladistics dates back to early 1900AD but it was Willi Henning in 1960s  who coined the term cladistics/phylogenetic systematics, he also developed methodology related to cladistic analysis.  Cladistics is a biological classification system which  groups organisms on the basis of shared ancestral characters. It takes into account the evolutionary relatedness e.g.  all the organisms having hair are placed in one group called as...

International Code for Zoological Nomenclature

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What was the need of giving scientific names to the organisms?  It was the inquisitive nature of the human beings and desire to know more about the objects and organisms around him that lead to naming of the animals. In pre historic times when mode of communications and transport were in the infancy,  when human beings used to live in the isolated places and independent societies, each society had its own language. The name of same organism in different languages was different e.g  peacock is a English name of a bird which is known as Moore in Hindi, Pfau in German, paon in French,  tovus in Uzbek languages and so on, similarly the lion is the English name of an animal which is known as sheer or Singh in Hindi, pinyen in Chinese, raion in Japanese and so on. Now can you imagine a Japanese trying to tell about the lion to an Indian when they hardly know about each other's language. Exactly same problem was started to be felt when the mode of transport evolved and diff...

Five kingdom classification.

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In the previous write up we came to  know about how the system of five kingdom classification evolved from two kingdom classification, through three and four kingdom classification  systems  and how the six  kingdom classification has come into being by a little advancement over the five kingdom classification.   R.H. Whittaker in 1969 introduced Five Kingdom classification.    This system of classification holds its ground even today as the criteria chosen for the classification are logical and scientific.    The five kingdoms as were proposed by Whittaker include 1. MONERA 2. PROTISTA 3. FUNGI 4. PLANTAE 5. ANIMALIA. This system of classification takes into account five criteria, which are as under:    1. Complexity of the cell: On the basis of complexity of the cell, all living organisms are categorized into two groups which include prokaryotes and eukaryotes. A. Prokaryotes: Those organisms which lack well d...