3. Class within Chordata: - Mammalia - Aves - Reptilia - Amphibia
This is just a simplified example of how eukaryotes can be classified into kingdoms, phylum, and class. There are many more kingdoms, phyla, and classes within the eukaryotic domain.
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Google Gemini AI
May 9
Flow Diagram to Classify Eukaryotes into Kingdoms, Phylum, and Class
Start
1. Determine if the organism is eukaryotic. - Yes: Continue to step 2. - No: The organism is not a eukaryote.
2. Classify organism into kingdom. - Protista: Unicellular or multicellular organisms that lack a defined nucleus or organelles. - Fungi: Multicellular organisms that absorb nutrients from their environment. - Plantae: Multicellular organisms that produce their own food through photosynthesis. - Animalia: Multicellular organisms that ingest food.
3. Classify organism into phylum. - Within each kingdom, further classify the organism into a phylum based on specific characteristics. For example: - Protista: Phylum Protozoa, Phylum Algae - Fungi: Phylum Ascomycota, Phylum Basidiomycota - Plantae: Phylum Bryophyta, Phylum Tracheophyta - Animalia: Phylum Chordata, Phylum Arthropoda
4. Classify organism into class. - Within each phylum, further classify the organism into a class based on even more specific characteristics. For example: - Phylum Protozoa: Class Sarcodina, Class Ciliophora - Phylum Ascomycota: Class Saccharomycetes, Class Pezizomycetes - Phylum Tracheophyta: Class Lycopsida, Class Pteropsida - Phylum Chordata: Class Mammalia, Class Aves