Taxonomy deals with identification, Classification
and Nomenclature of organisms. Objective of taxonomy is to arrange organisms
into categories that reflect the similarities of the individuals within the
groups.
• Carolus
Linnaeus: 1700’s: Two Kingdoms: Plants and Animals
• Carolus
Linnaeus: 1753’s: Binomial nomenclature --"father
of modern taxonomy"
• Ernst
Haekel: 1866: Kingdom Protista
• R.H.
Whittaker: 1969: Five Kingdoms: Monera,
Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia
• Carl
Woese: 1990: Three Domains: archaea, bacteria, and eukaryote domains.
Taxonomic Ranks
Rank |
Example |
Domain |
Bacteria |
Phylum |
Proteobacteria |
Class |
Gammaproteobacteria |
Order |
Enterobacteriales |
Family |
Enrerobacteriaceae |
Genus |
Shigella |
Species |
S. dysenteriae |
Order- ends with “ales” and Family with “ceae”
The basic taxonomic group (taxon) is species.
Species of higher organisms are groups of potentially interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively isol ated from other groups. This definition is satisfactory for sexually reproducing organisms, but fails
wjth many microorganisms as they do not reproduce
sexually. So a prokaryotic
species is a collection of strains
having similar characteristics. In other words, prokaryotic species·is a
collection of strains that share many stable properties and differ significantly from other groups of strains. Perhaps
a species should
be the collection of organisms that share the same sequences
in their core housekeeping genes (genes coding for products
that are required by all cells and which are usually continually expressed).
A strain is the descendants of a single, pure microbial culture. Bacterial species consist of a special strain called "type strain" together with all other strains that are considered sufficiently similar to the type strain. The type strain is the strain that is designated to be the permanent reference specimen for the species. It is the strain to which all other strains must be compared to see if they resemble it closely enough to belong to the species. So they are special and hence much care is taken to preserve and maintain them by national reference collections such as the ATCC (American Type Culture Collection) in United States or the National Collection of Type Cultures in England.
There are a number
of different ways in which strains within a species may be described. Biovars are variant
strains characterized by biochemical or physiological differences, morphovars
differ morphologically, and serovars have different antigenic properties.
Just as bacterial species is composed of a collection of similar strains, a bacterial genus is composed of a collection of similar species. One of the species is designated as the type species and this serves as the permanent example of the genus.
Species |
A group of similar
Strains |
Genus |
A group
of similar Species |
Family |
A group
of similar
Genera |
Order |
A group
of similar Families |
Class |
A group
of similar Orders |
Phylum (Division) |
A group
of similar Classes |
Domain (Kingdom) |
A group
of similar Phylum |
Microorganisms are named by using the binomial system introduced by Carl Linnaeus. The Latinized, italized name consists
of two parts. The first part,
which is capitalized, is the generic
name, and the second part is the uncapitalized species name (Eg. Escherichia
coli).