Indian River Lagoon Species Inventory
A Word About Species Names...
Many people wonder why scientists use complicated, hard to pronounce names when speaking about familiar animals and plants. Common names such as blue crab, redfish, and dolphin are successfully used in casual communication, and convey an immediate idea of what a particular animal or plant looks like. Scientists avoid using common names because they are often not specific to a particular species. For instance, the blue crab is only one of many species of crabs that can be described as blue. In the Indian River Lagoon alone, there are several species of "blue crabs": the blue crab (Callinectes sapidus), the lesser blue crab (Callinectes similis), the red blue crab (Callinectes bocourti), the ornate blue crab (Callinectes ornatus), and the blue land crab (Cardisoma guanhumi). What's in a Name? The system of naming species was first developed by Swedish botanist and physician, Carolus Linnaeus in the mid- 1700s. Linnaeus is the father of the branch of biology called taxonomy, which seeks to describe, name and classify organisms. His system of naming species, still in use today, begins with assigning all species a two-part Latin name called a binomial. The first word of the binomial is the genus name of the species, and the second word is the specific epithet for the species. For example (see figure above), the scientific name for the blue crab is Callinectes sapidus. Callinectes, the genus name, is the collective term which includes many species of crabs closely related to the blue crab. The specific epithet, sapidus, describes exactly which of the Callinectes species is being identified. How does Taxonomy Work? Linnaeus' original classification system is based on 2 main goals. The first is to distinguish between closely related species and assign them as separate species based on differences in specific traits called diagnostic characters. The second goal of taxonomy is to organize groups of similar species into broader and more collective categories. For example, the species name for the domestic cat is Felis catus. Felis denotes the genus name for this species, while catus denotes the unique specific epithet for the species. The housecat is closely related to several other feline species such as the bobcat, Felis rufus, and the cougar, Felis concolor, so they are all placed in the same genus. Members of the genus Felis are also related, though less closely, to other cat genera such as Panthera, which includes lions, leopards and tigers; and Leopardus, which includes the ocelots. Because the members of all of these genera are cats, they can be grouped together under the family Felidae. At the Order level, cats are grouped with other animals that are quite different in physical appearance and general behavior, but with whom they share other basic attributes. In this case, cats, dogs, bears and some other groups are all predators that hunt and prey upon other animals. They are thus grouped together in the Order Carnivora, which includes meat eating animals. At the Class level, cats and other predatory animals are grouped with non-predators with whom they share specific biological traits. In this case cats, dogs, bears, sheep, horses, cows, giraffes, whales, and many other groups, including people, belong to Class Mammalia (mammals). All mammals have hair, are warm-blooded, and give birth to live young which feed via mammary glands. At the Phylum level, cats are included with all other vertebrate animals in the subphylum Vertebrata, in the Phylum Chordata. This large grouping includes all animals having either a notochord, or an actual spine. Lastly, the most inclusive taxonomic grouping is the Kingdom. Biologists often delimit the basic taxonomic groupings used to classify all living things into a 5 kingdom scheme. Kingdom Monera includes all the bacteria and other Prokaryotic cell types; Kingdom Protista includes all the algae and single celled Eukaryotes; Kingdom Animalia includes all the animals; Kingdom Plantae includes all the plants; and Kingdom Fungi includes all of the fungi and molds. |
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