Carolus Linnaeus
Carolus Linnaeus
Carolus Linnaeus
SWEDISH BOTANIST
Carolus Linnaeus, also called Carl Linnaeus, Swedish Carl von Linné,
(born May 23, 1707, Råshult, Småland, Sweden—died January 10, 1778,
Uppsala), Swedish naturalist and explorer who was the first to frame
principles for defining natural genera and species of organisms and to
create a uniform system for naming them (binomial nomenclature).
Nils taught Carl that every plant had a name. At the time, plant names (which were in Latin, and still are to this
day) were very long and descriptive, and difficult to remember. Nevertheless, Carl dedicated himself to learning
as many as he could. In fact, at school he was often more interested in memorising plant names than in his
school lessons. Due to his interest in plants and science, Carl was encouraged by his tutor, Johan Stensson
Rothman (1684–1763), to study medicine.
In 1728, after spending a year studying medicine at the University of Lund, Carl Linnaeus transferred to
Uppsala University, in the hope that the course would be better. He studied the use of plants, minerals and
animals in medicine. It was here that he came to the attention of Olof Celsius (1670–1756) a theologian
(professor of religious study) and naturalist (studying natural history). Celsius, who was uncle to Anders
Celsius (the inventor of the Celsius thermometer), found Linnaeus studying in the university botanic garden—
and was very surprised to find that the young man knew the names of all the surrounding plants. Linnaeus had
very little money and Celsius offered him a place to live while at university and allowed him to use his library.
During this time, Linnaeus wrote an essay on the classification of plants based on their sexual parts and one
professor, Olof Rudbeck (1660-1740), was so impressed that he asked Linnaeus to become a lecturer in
botany.
With over 250,000 species, the plant kingdom Without plants, life on Earth
is the second largest kingdom. Plant species would not exist! Plants feed
range from the tiny green mosses almost all the heterotrophs
to giant trees. (organisms that eat other
organisms) on Earth. Wow!
Animals
The animal kingdom is the largest kingdom
with over 1 million known species.
Eubacteria
Like archaebacteria, eubacteria are complex
and single celled. Most bacteria are in
the EUBACTERIA kingdom. They are the
kinds found everywhere and are the ones
people are most familiar with.
Eubacteria are classified in their own kingdom Most eubacteria are helpful. Some
because their chemical makeup is different. produce vitamins and foods like
yogurt. However, these eubacteria,
Streptococci pictured above, can give
you strep throat!
Fungi
Mushrooms, mold and mildew are all
examples of organisms in the kingdom fungi.
Protists
Slime molds and algae are protists.
Sometimes they are called the odds and ends
kingdom because its members are so different
from one another. Protists include all
microscopic organisms that
are not bacteria, notanimals, not plants
and not fungi.
The binomial system of nomenclature is the formal system by which all living species are
classified (taxonomy)
It was initially developed by a Swedish botanist named Carolus Linnaeus in 1735
It is periodically assessed and updated at a series of international congresses which occur every 4
years
According to the binomial system of nomenclature, every organism is designated a scientific name
with two parts:
Genus is written first and is capitalised (e.g. Homo)
Species follows and is written in lower case (e.g. Homo sapiens)
Some species may occasionally have a sub-species designation (e.g. Homo sapiens sapiens –
modern man)
Writing conventions:
When typing the scientific name, it should be presented in italics
When hand writing the scientific name, it is customary to underline