The Living World
The Living World introduces the diversity of life forms on Earth—estimated at 1.7-1.8 million known species—and the foundational scientific processes of taxonomy: identification, nomenclature, classification, and systematics used to study and organize organisms.
- 1The living world contains 1.7–1.8 million known species across diverse habitats; new organisms are continuously being identified
- 2Identification is the process of recognizing and describing organisms; nomenclature is standardizing their names using Latin-based scientific names
- 3Binomial nomenclature assigns each organism a two-word scientific name: the Genus (capitalized) and specific epithet (lowercase), e.g., Mangifera indica for mango
- 4Taxonomic categories form a hierarchy from species through genus, family, order, class, phylum, and kingdom, with higher categories containing organisms with fewer shared characteristics
- 5Taxonomy is the branch of biology dealing with identification, nomenclature, classification, and systematics of organisms based on morphological, structural, developmental, and ecological features
