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A Handbook of Biology

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The number of species that are known and described, ranges between

1.7-1.8 million.

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Classification is the process by which anything is grouped into convenient

categories based on some easily observable characters.

ÅRÏSTØTLË’S ÇLÅSSÏFÏÇÅTÏØÑ

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Aristotle was the earliest to attempt a more scientific basis for

classification of organisms. He classified plants into trees, shrubs & herbs

and animals into 2 groups; those with red blood (enaima) & without red

blood (anaima).

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Linnaeus (1758) classified organisms into two kingdoms - Kingdom

Plantae & Kingdom Animalia.

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This system was proposed by Ernst Haeckel (1866).

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He created a new kingdom Protista, having only unicellular eukaryotes.

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Proposed by Copeland (1956).

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Copeland created a separate kingdom 'Monera' (Mychota) for

prokaryotes.

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It included the unicellular and the multicellular organisms

in same group.

E.g.

Chlamydomonas

(unicellular)

and

Spirogyra

(multicellular) were placed under algae. It did not

differentiate between the heterotrophic fungi and the

autotrophic green algae and plants.

Drawbacks of 2-kingdom classification: Prokaryotes

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(Bacteria, cyanobacteria) and eukaryotes (Fungi,

mosses, ferns, gymnosperms & angiosperms) were

included under ‘Plantae’ based on the presence of

cell wall but they widely differ in other characteristics.

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Fungi have chitinous cell wall while the green plants

have cellulosic cell wall.

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