How Do Scientists Classify Animals?

Scientists classify animals using physical traits, behaviors, and genetics in a process called taxonomy.

Scientists look at traits like backbones, body coverings, reproduction methods, and diet.

  • Vertebrates have backbones (like mammals, birds, and reptiles).
  • Invertebrates do not (like insects and jellyfish).

Example: Lion Classification:

  • Kingdom: Animalia – animals
  • Phylum: Chordata – animals with a backbone
  • Class: Mammalia – mammals (have fur, produce milk)
  • Order: Carnivora – meat-eating animals
  • Family: Felidae – cats
  • Genus: Panthera – big cats that roar
  • Species: Panthera leo – the lion

Vertebrates

All vertebrates have a backbone.

Mammals: Warm-blooded, fur or hair, live births (usually), milk for young (e.g., whales, humans).

Birds: Feathers, lay eggs, hollow bones for flight (e.g., eagles).

Reptiles: Scales, cold-blooded, lay eggs (e.g., snakes, lizards).

Amphibians: Begin in water with gills, develop lungs, moist skin (e.g., frogs, salamanders).

Fish: Live in water, gills, fins, scales (e.g., sharks, goldfish).

Invertebrates

Invertebrates do not have a backbone.

Insects: 6 legs, three body parts, often wings (e.g., ants, butterflies).

Arachnids: 8 legs, 2 body parts, no wings or antennae (e.g., spiders).

Crustaceans: Mostly aquatic, hard exoskeleton, gills, jointed limbs (e.g., crabs, shrimps).

Mollusks: Soft-bodied, many have shells, muscular foot  (e.g., snails). 

Worms: Long, soft bodies, no limbs (e.g., earthworms, flatworms).

Echinoderms: Spiny skin, live in oceans, radial symmetry (e.g., starfish).

Cnidarians: Soft-bodied, tentacles with stinging cells, mostly aquatic (e.g., jellyfish, coral).

Sponges: Simple, porous bodies, filter feeders (e.g., sea sponge).

Fun Facts

Here are some interesting facts about animal classification:

  • Humans share 98–99% of their DNA with chimpanzees!
  • Sponges are animals, even though they don’t move.
  • Whales and bats are mammals, even though they live in water or fly.
  • Genetic testing revealed that giant pandas are true bears, not raccoon relatives as once thought.

Review

Let’s quickly recap what we learned about animal classification:

  • What is the science of classifying animals called? Taxonomy
  • What type of animal has a backbone? Vertebrates
  • What animal group does a whale belong to? Mammals
  • What group includes insects and jellyfish? Invertebrates
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