Animal Systematics
Classification of Animals
   - Animals belong to Domain Eukarya
   - Group with fungi as Opisthokonts
   - Unicellular = Protozoan
   - Multicellular = Metazoan
                 Warm-blooded                                       Cold-blooded
 Warm-blooded animals are defined as animals        Cannot regulate their internal body
 that can regulate and maintain constant internal   temperature with the change in the
 body temperature. They can survive in any          environment. They cannot survive in extreme
 temperature range as they can adapt to it          temperature conditions. Examples of
 easily. Mammals are the best examples of           cold-blooded animals are reptiles, fish, etc.
 warm-blooded animals.
Biological Systematics
   - Deals with the diversity, relationships, and evolutionary history of organisms existing on
       Earth
   - Encompasses taxonomy, phylogenetics, and evolution.
Taxonomy - the science of describing, identifying, naming, and classifying organisms
Phylogenetics - a science that deals with the evolutionary relationships of organisms
Evolution - deals with the variability of organisms throughout time and space
Taxonomic ranks = hierarchy of life
                            Eukarya (Domain)
                              Animalia (Kingdom)
                                Chordata (Phylum)
                                   Mammalia (Class)
                                     Carnivora (Order)
                                       Canidae (Family)
                                         Canis (Genus)
                                           (Species)
Mnemonic:
Did King Philip Come Over For Great Soup?
Binomial Nomenclature
   - A species is also a scientific name comprising of two names
              Genus + specific epithet (ex. Homo Sapiens)
   - Italicized when written
   - Underlined when handwritten
   - When handwritten, separate underlines for genus and epithet
   - If unidentifiable up to the species level, “sp.” can be used (ex. Felis sp.)
   - “sp.” should not be italicized nor underlined
Cladogram
   - A representation of the phylogeny of different organisms, simply, an evolutionary tree
   - About the hypothesis of how species are currently being defined
   - Exhibits relationships between organisms
   - Branching or forking pattern
   - Common points in the branches are called nodes
   - Nodes = common ancestors
Monophyly - the condition of being a clade—that is, a group of taxa composed only of a
common ancestor (or more precisely an ancestral population) and all of its lineal descendants.
An example of a monophyletic cladogram: (note that all species in the cladogram are
Trimeresurus “T.”)
An example of a non-monophyletic cladogram: (note the two species with “G.”)
   -   Non-monophyly is exhibited if a group should include a common ancestor, but not all its
       descendants
   -   In systematics, non-monophyletic groups are not recognized as natural
   -   Character states could also be mapped
   -   Exhibits evolution of features within taxa or groups of taxa
   -   States are either derived (apomorphy) or ancestral/primitive
The apomorphy for the lineages of Alpha, Beta and Gamma are “Four appendages”; an
apomorphy for the entire group
“Skull crest” as the apomorphy of both Beta and Gamma
Lastly, for Gamma, the evolution of “Two appendages” that are exclusive for that taxon
“Four appendages” is a primitive state for Gamma, and the derived state is having “Two
appendages”
Dichotomous Key
   - A taxonomic tool for rapid species identification
   - Comprises of couplets with two contrasting leads
   - Dichotomous keys are comprised of a series of choices that will eventually, by each
      decision made based on the features found on the specimen, will lead to the
      identification of the unknown specimen