Patterns in Life: Diversity & Classification
Chapter 12 — full, detailed solutions to every In-Text activity, Pause & Ponder question, and end-of-chapter “Revise, Reflect, Refine” exercise, with clean diagrams and the original textbook figures.
In-Text — Activities & Pause & Ponder
Every Think It Over, Activity (12.1–12.9) and Pause & Ponder question in the chapter.
Biodiversity (biological diversity) is the enormous variety of living organisms on the Earth — from microscopic algae and bacteria to giant trees, from glowing jellyfish to soaring eagles — together with the variety of habitats they live in, from the snow-clad Himalayas to the coral reefs of the Andaman Sea.
It exists at three levels:
- Species diversity — the number of different kinds of organisms.
- Genetic diversity — variation within a species (e.g. many crop varieties).
- Habitat/ecosystem diversity — forests, deserts, wetlands, reefs and so on.
It is essential for life: ocean algae release most of our oxygen, fungi and bacteria recycle waste into soil nutrients, and bees, birds and bats pollinate flowers — keeping ecosystems stable.
Grouping organisms by shared characteristics turns millions of confusing species into an organised, systematic picture. It lets us:
- Compare and identify organisms quickly by common features.
- See relationships — similar features suggest a common ancestor.
- Study life logically, like books arranged in a library.
- Apply knowledge to conservation, ecosystem management and farming.
Scientists move from broad, visible features to finer ones:
- External features — shape, size, body organisation
- Mode of nutrition — autotrophic or heterotrophic
- Internal structures — skeleton, organs, tissues
- Cell structure — unicellular/multicellular, prokaryote/eukaryote, cell wall
- Ecological role — producer, consumer, decomposer
- Reproduction — sexual and/or asexual
- Genetic similarity — likeness of DNA
Plants are mainly grouped by body complexity, vascular tissue and seeds/flowers; animals by features such as the presence or absence of a notochord and their level of body organisation.
Knowing crops, pests and helpful organisms precisely improves farming:
- Crop varieties — choosing drought-tolerant, pest-resistant types keeps the diversity that reduces crop-failure risk.
- Pest management — identifying insects tells us which protect crops and which damage them.
- Helpful microbes — classifying bacteria like Rhizobium (fixes nitrogen) boosts soil fertility.
- Sustainable farming — understanding relationships supports balanced, eco-friendly practices.
The same animals can be grouped differently depending on the criterion chosen — that is the key idea:
| Criterion | Group / examples | Feature used |
|---|---|---|
| Active in day | Peacock, deer, monkey, eagle, butterfly | Time of activity |
| Active at night | Owl, bat, civet, slow loris, porcupine | Time of activity |
| Active both | Tiger, leopard, snake | Time of activity |
| Where seen | Air: eagle, bat · Trees: monkey, owl · Floor: tiger, rabbit · Water: crocodile | Habitat |
| Eating habit | Carnivore: eagle, tiger, leopard · Herbivore: deer, rabbit | Nutrition |
| Body covering | Feathers: owl, peacock · Fur: tiger, deer · Scales: snake | External feature |
Because one organism (the tiger) fits several groups at once, a fixed, systematic basis is needed — leading to classification.
Yes — very likely. When organisms share fundamental features (cell structure, body plan, DNA), the simplest explanation is that they inherited them from a shared ancestor.
E.g. all mammals have hair and feed young with milk; tiger and lion (genus Panthera) share skull structure and the ability to roar. The more features shared, the closer the common ancestor — which is why DNA similarity is a strong modern criterion.
By using biological classification and binomial nomenclature. Each species gets a unique two-part scientific name and a place in the hierarchy (Kingdom → … → Species). This lets scientists worldwide record, compare and refer to species without confusion, and group similar ones (e.g. all four hornbills in one family).
Despite the shared hornbill body plan, they differ in fine features:
- Body size (e.g. the Great Hornbill is much larger).
- Colour and pattern of plumage, neck and throat.
- Shape, size and colour of the casque on the beak, and the beak itself.
- Calls, habitat and the type/size of tree and fruit used.
Hornbills nest only in large, old trees with cavities. If they vanished:
- Hornbills would lose nesting sites and could fail to breed, so populations fall.
- As key seed dispersers, their decline would reduce regeneration of fruit trees.
- The whole food web linked to them would be disturbed, lowering the forest’s biodiversity.
Whittaker’s system uses four main criteria:
- Cell type — prokaryote or eukaryote (true nucleus or not)
- Cell structure — cell wall present/absent (chitin vs cellulose)
- Level of organisation — unicellular or multicellular
- Mode of nutrition / ecological role — autotroph, heterotroph; producer, consumer, decomposer
The flow chart shows how these sort all life into the five kingdoms:
Both appear as single-celled prokaryotes (no true nucleus) — Kingdom Monera.
- Cells are tiny and simple; genetic material lies free in the cytoplasm.
- Bacteria occur in many shapes and live everywhere — soil, water, air, hot springs, even inside us.
- Cyanobacteria are autotrophic and photosynthesise.
Some bacteria are pathogens, but many are useful (Lactobacillus, Rhizobium); gut bacteria of ruminants help make biogas, and some break down pollutants.
After a week, a drop under the microscope shows tiny moving organisms — protists such as Amoeba, Paramecium and Euglena.
These are single-celled eukaryotes (Kingdom Protista) living in water/moist places; some autotrophic, some heterotrophic, many moving by cilia or flagella.
Safety: the infusion smells bad — wear a lab coat, mask and gloves, and autoclave before discarding.
In a unicellular organism one cell is a complete body; its organelles act like organs:
- Cell membrane → exchange of gases/materials
- Food vacuoles → digestion · Contractile vacuole → excretion
- Cilia/flagella → movement · Nucleus → control & reproduction
Because the cell is tiny, materials diffuse quickly, so one cell manages everything. Large multicellular bodies instead use division of labour among specialised cells, tissues and organs.
Bryophytes (mosses, Marchantia) form flat green mats. Compared with ordinary leaves:
- Their leaf-like parts are simple, only a few cells thick, not true leaves (no proper veins).
- They have no true roots, stems, leaves or vascular tissue.
- They attach by thread-like rhizoids and need a film of water to reproduce.
Because they need water for reproduction they are the “amphibians of the plant kingdom.”
First seen in pteridophytes (ferns): vascular tissue (xylem & phloem) and true roots, stems and leaves, which absorb and transport water internally, so the plant no longer needs a wet surface for transport.
But ferns (and bryophytes) still need water for reproduction, because male cells must swim to the female cells — so they remain tied to moist conditions for fertilisation.
In a tall plant, water from roots must travel a long way up to the leaves and food must travel down — too slow for simple diffusion.
So tall plants need vascular tissues: xylem carries water/minerals up, phloem carries food. These pipelines allow efficient long-distance transport, letting ferns, gymnosperms and angiosperms grow large.
Seeds protect the embryo, store food and allow fertilisation without water (as in gymnosperms), so seed plants survive in dry and cold regions.
Fruits (angiosperms) protect seeds and disperse them far by wind, water, insects, birds or animals. Together they let plants colonise a wide range of new environments — making angiosperms the most widespread group.
Both have xylem and phloem, so both transport water and food. The difference is in arrangement and complexity:
- Fern (pteridophyte): vascular tissue is simpler/primitive, with basic bundle arrangement and little secondary growth.
- Sunflower (angiosperm): bundles are more organised, arranged in a regular ring, often with cambium for further growth.
Leaf venation sorts flowering plants into two groups:
| Feature | Monocots | Dicots |
|---|---|---|
| Venation | Parallel veins | Reticulate (net-like) veins |
| Leaf shape | Long, narrow (grass, maize) | Broad (mango, rose) |
| Seed | One cotyledon | Two cotyledons |
Broad reticulate dicot leaves capture sunlight efficiently; narrow parallel monocot leaves bend in wind and resist drying — venation reflects adaptation.
| Plant group | Advantage for survival | Exception / Challenge |
|---|---|---|
| Thallophyta (algae) | Simple thallus absorbs water, nutrients & gases directly; easily dispersed in water. | Cannot live on land; fully water-dependent. |
| Bryophyta | First to colonise land; ‘amphibians’ adapted to moist land. | No vascular tissue/true organs; always need moisture & water to reproduce. |
| Pteridophyta | Live on land; vascular tissue transports water & food; true roots/stems/leaves. | Reproduction needs water; produce no seeds. |
| Gymnosperm | Needle/scale leaves cut water loss; no water needed for fertilisation; form seeds. | Seeds are ‘naked’ — not enclosed in fruits. |
| Angiosperm | Flowers, fruits & covered seeds; efficient dispersal & reproduction. | Reproduction depends on pollinating agents; complex tissue systems. |
From algae to angiosperms, plants gradually evolved transport tissue → seeds → flowers & fruits, steadily conquering land.
The beetle’s exoskeleton (rigid chitin covering) gives advantages the soft earthworm lacks:
- Protection from predators and injury.
- Prevents water loss, so it can live in dry, exposed places on land.
- Supports powerful muscles for walking and flight.
- Provides shape and support on land.
This is a key reason arthropods are the most successful land animals.
It means more than the number of species. It includes three connected levels:
- Genetic diversity — variation within a species.
- Species diversity — the variety of organisms.
- Ecosystem/habitat diversity — varied habitats and the interactions within them.
I would record the standard criteria, broad to fine:
- Cell type — prokaryote or eukaryote (Monera vs the rest).
- Number of cells — unicellular or multicellular.
- Cell wall — present/absent and its material.
- Mode of nutrition — autotroph or heterotroph.
- Body organisation, movement, symmetry, and notochord/backbone (for animals).
Why: these reliably place it in the correct kingdom and reveal its relationships.
Every cell carries DNA, the inherited instructions for growth and function. Comparing DNA reveals similarities invisible from outside.
Organisms with similar DNA share a common ancestry, so genetic studies show true evolutionary relationships more accurately than external features — leading to refined systems like the three-domain classification.
Climate change alters temperature, rainfall and habitats:
- Habitat loss — melting ice, droughts or floods destroy homes.
- Range shifts & timing — species migrate; flowering may fall out of sync with pollinators.
- Extinction — species that can’t adapt disappear, and dependents decline too.
- Disturbed food webs, reducing overall biodiversity.
Exercise — Revise, Reflect, Refine
Full solutions to the end-of-chapter questions 1–15.
- Bilateral symmetrical body
- Body with jointed legs
- Cylindrical body
- Body with little segmentation
Insects are arthropods, whose defining feature is jointed legs with a hard exoskeleton. An earthworm (Annelida) has a soft, cylindrical, segmented body with no legs. Options (i), (iii) and (iv) can apply to worms too — only jointed legs confirm an insect.
- Absence of mitochondria
- Ability to photosynthesise
- Presence of a cell membrane
- Presence of a cell wall
Animals are eukaryotic, multicellular, heterotrophic organisms whose cells have only a cell membrane and no cell wall. Sponge cells lack a wall and cannot photosynthesise — like all animal cells they are bounded by a cell membrane. (iv) would place them with plants/fungi; (ii) with plants.
Example — a house crow vs a garden lizard:
| Feature | Crow | Lizard |
|---|---|---|
| Body covering | Feathers | Dry scales |
| Locomotion | Flies (wings) | Crawls (four limbs) |
| Warmth / eggs | Warm-blooded; hard-shelled eggs | Cold-blooded; leathery eggs |
| Group | Class Aves | Class Reptilia |
Differences in body covering, locomotion, temperature control and reproduction are the very criteria that place them in separate classes.
Cellular organisation (prokaryote/eukaryote, unicellular/multicellular, walled or not) is shared by every living organism, so it divides all life into kingdoms at the first step.
Xylem and phloem exist only in some plants — useless for classifying bacteria, fungi or animals. A good basis must be universal and fundamental; vascular tissue is a specialised, later feature useful only within plants.
Kingdom Protista (a ciliate like Paramecium).
- Single-celled → not Plantae/Fungi/Animalia (multicellular).
- True nucleus → eukaryote, so not Monera.
- Cilia for movement → typical of ciliate protists.
Each organism plays a role, and variety keeps the system resilient:
- Producers make food and oxygen.
- Consumers transfer energy; pollinators and dispersers help plants reproduce.
- Decomposers recycle nutrients.
Many interconnected food webs mean that if one species declines, others can fill its role. Diversity is also a natural barrier (e.g. mangroves reduced cyclone damage in Odisha, 1999). Loss of diversity makes ecosystems fragile.
- Prokaryotes and eukaryotes would be mixed — bacteria with Amoeba, ignoring the deepest division in life.
- Different nutrition and roles (autotroph, heterotroph, decomposer) would be lumped together.
- It would hide evolutionary relationships, making the system inaccurate.
This is why scientists split them into Monera (prokaryotes) and Protista (eukaryotes).
- Acellular — no cell, membrane or organelles, so they can’t be sorted by cell type/organisation.
- No metabolism, growth or response on their own.
- They reproduce only inside a host; outside they are inert.
Since the five kingdoms rest on cellular organisation, non-cellular viruses fit none.
View: create a separate category, distinct from the cellular kingdoms.
Justification: viruses are on the borderline of living and non-living — they have genetic material yet are acellular and inert outside a host. Forcing them into a cellular kingdom is wrong, but they are too important to ignore.
Shows: classification is not fixed — it evolves as we find new organisms and tools. The difficulty of placing viruses proves the system keeps improving.
Features preventing placement:
- Acellular — no cell/membrane/organelles, so cell-type and organisation criteria can’t apply.
- No independent metabolism, growth or reproduction.
- Inactive outside a host.
Limitation: a cell-based system cannot accommodate non-cellular entities — so no classification system is complete; it must be revised as knowledge grows.
| Feature | Bryophytes | Pteridophytes |
|---|---|---|
| Body parts | No true roots/stems/leaves; rhizoids only | True roots, stems and leaves |
| Vascular tissue | Absent | Present (xylem & phloem) |
| Size & habitat | Small; moist green mats | Larger; better land-adapted |
Because pteridophytes have true organs and conducting tissue while bryophytes do not, they are placed in a separate, more advanced class.
Genus. Moving down the hierarchy, groups get smaller but members share more features.
A class is broad with many orders, families and genera, sharing only general features. A genus holds a few closely related species sharing many detailed features (e.g. Panthera: tiger & lion share skull structure and roaring).
That mix fits a protist like Euglena. Confirming characters:
- Unicellular body (not multicellular plants/animals).
- Eukaryotic — true nucleus (rules out Monera).
- Locomotion by cilia/flagella combined with photosynthesis.
Fungi are usually multicellular, but yeast is a unicellular exception. The key features are:
- Cell wall of chitin (the defining fungal trait — yeast has it).
- Heterotrophic nutrition by absorption (no photosynthesis).
- Eukaryotic; reproduces by budding/spores.
| Organism | Key observations |
|---|---|
| P | Microscopic; no true nucleus; rigid cell covering; survives high salinity & temperature |
| Q | Multicellular; filamentous body; cell wall present; no chlorophyll; grows on dead organic matter |
| R | Unicellular; true nucleus; contractile vacuole; moves by flagella; photosynthesis in light but heterotrophic in dark |
| S | Multicellular; well-differentiated tissues; backbone present; aquatic respiration in early life stage |
| T | Acellular; contains genetic material; remains inactive outside a host cell |
(i) Clearly Fungi — Q. Multicellular, filamentous, cell wall, no chlorophyll, grows on dead matter → saprophytic absorptive heterotroph.
(ii) Monera — P. Microscopic, no true nucleus (prokaryote), rigid covering, survives extremes → bacterium/archaean.
(iii) R vs Q (both eukaryotic): R is unicellular and can photosynthesise (and switch to heterotrophy), moving by flagellum → Protista. Q is multicellular, lacks chlorophyll, absorbs from dead matter → Fungi. Number of cells + mode of nutrition separate them.
(iv) Why S can’t be classified by nutrition alone: all animals are heterotrophic, so nutrition doesn’t distinguish S. Its backbone and tissue organisation identify it as a vertebrate (fish/amphibian); more features are needed.
(v) Organism T: it is acellular — it lacks cellular organisation, the most fundamental classification feature. Though it has genetic material, it’s inert outside a host. This shows a limitation: cell-based systems can’t accommodate non-cellular entities (T is virus-like).
(vi) If based only on habitat: unrelated organisms would be grouped together (e.g. whale, fish, octopus, water plant all ‘aquatic’). Consequence: it hides true relationships and makes classification inaccurate and useless.
(vii) New organism — multicellular, eukaryotic, no chlorophyll, absorbs nutrients from a host externally: place under Fungi. Both fungi and animals are heterotrophic, but fungi feed by absorption through the body surface (often with a chitin wall), exactly as described, while animals ingest food. The absorptive nutrition is decisive.
The quest continues…
From microscopic bacteria to mighty trees — classification keeps evolving as we discover new life and new tools.
