🌿 Biological Classification — Five Kingdom System
Taxonomic Hierarchy · Historic Systems · Monera · Protista · Fungi · Plantae · Animalia · Viruses · Lichens · Whittaker 1969 · PYQs & MCQs
Taxonomic Hierarchy — Inverted Triangle. The broadest level (Domain) is at the top; the most specific (Species) at the bottom. Each level down narrows the group. The red fox (Vulpes vulpes) is used as the example organism throughout this hierarchy. (Uploaded image — Legacy IAS)
Domain → Kingdom → Phylum → Class → Order → Family → Genus → Species
Binomial Nomenclature (Carolus Linnaeus): Scientific name = Genus + species. Genus capitalised, species lowercase, both italicised. Example: Homo sapiens, Panthera tigris (tiger), Oryza sativa (rice).
| System | Proposed By | Year | Kingdoms | Key Addition | Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Two Kingdom | Aristotle | ~350 BC | Plantae + Animalia | First systematic attempt | No place for microbes, fungi, bacteria |
| Three Kingdom | Ernst Haeckel | 1866 | +Protista added | Recognised unicellular eukaryotes | Couldn't resolve multicellular vs unicellular properly |
| Four Kingdom | Herbert Copeland | 1956 | +Monera added | Separated prokaryotes (Monera) | Protista became overcrowded with unrelated species |
| Five Kingdom | R.H. Whittaker | 1969 | Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia | Separated Fungi as its own kingdom; based on cell structure, nutrition, reproduction | Molecular taxonomy not integrated; virus/archaebacteria issues |
| Six Kingdom | Carl Woese | 1990 | Bacteria + Archaea + Eukarya (with 4 kingdoms) | Divided Monera → Bacteria + Archaea based on rRNA analysis | Still evolving with advanced phylogenetics |
1. Cell structure (prokaryote vs eukaryote)
2. Body organisation (unicellular vs multicellular)
3. Mode of nutrition (autotrophic vs heterotrophic)
4. Mode of reproduction (asexual vs sexual)
5. Phylogenetic relationships (evolutionary history)
Five Kingdom Classification — Whittaker (1969). The five kingdoms from left to right: Monera (bacteria — prokaryotic, unicellular), Protists (unicellular eukaryotes — diverse group), Fungi (saprophytic, chitin cell wall), Plants (photosynthetic, cellulose cell wall), Animals (heterotrophic, no cell wall). Together, these five kingdoms encompass all known life forms. (Uploaded image — Legacy IAS)
| Feature | 🦠 Monera | 🔬 Protista | 🍄 Fungi | 🌱 Plantae | 🐾 Animalia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell type | Prokaryotic | Eukaryotic | Eukaryotic | Eukaryotic | Eukaryotic |
| Cell wall | Peptidoglycan | Present/absent (varies) | Chitin | Cellulose | Absent |
| Organisation | Unicellular | Unicellular | Uni/Multicellular | Multicellular | Multicellular |
| Nutrition | Autotrophic/Heterotrophic | Autotrophic/Heterotrophic | Saprophytic (absorptive) | Autotrophic (photosynthetic) | Heterotrophic (ingestive) |
| Nucleus | No true nucleus | True nucleus | True nucleus | True nucleus | True nucleus |
| Examples | Bacteria, Cyanobacteria, Archaebacteria | Amoeba, Euglena, Diatoms, Paramecium | Mushrooms, Yeast, Aspergillus | Ferns, Mosses, Trees, Flowers | Insects, Fish, Birds, Mammals |
• Unicellular body organisation
• Cell wall of peptidoglycan (in Eubacteria)
• Circular DNA in cytoplasm (not in nucleus)
• Evolved ~3.5 billion years ago — first life forms on Earth
• Reproduce asexually by fission, budding, fragmentation or spore formation
• Adapted to extreme environments (hot springs, salt lakes, deep sea)
Bacterial Cell Structure. Key components: Cell wall (peptidoglycan — outside), Plasma membrane (phospholipid bilayer), Cytoplasm (contains all cell contents), Chromosome (circular DNA — not in nucleus), Plasmid DNA (extra-chromosomal DNA), Ribosomes (70S, protein synthesis), Mesosome (infolding of membrane — aids respiration/cell division), Capsule (protective slime layer — increases virulence), Pili (attachment to surfaces), Flagellum (motility). No mitochondria, no nucleus! (Uploaded image — Legacy IAS)
Bacillus (rod-shaped): Lactobacillus, E. coli, Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Vibrio (comma-shaped): Vibrio cholerae (causes cholera)
Spirillum (spiral): Spirochaetes, Treponema (causes syphilis)
Mycoplasma: No cell wall — pleomorphic (any shape)
Saprotrophic: Clostridium (decomposer, anaerobe)
Symbiotic: Rhizobium (N-fixation in legume roots)
Parasitic: Mycoplasma, Salmonella
By respiration: Aerobic (Pseudomonas), Anaerobic (Clostridium), Facultative anaerobic (E.coli)
Methanogens: Produce methane (CH₄) in gut of ruminants (cows, buffaloes). Marsh gas production. Biogas plants.
Halophiles: Extreme salt environments (Dead Sea, salt lakes). Halobacterium.
Thermoacidophiles: Hot springs, acidic environments. Sulfolobus (grows at 80°C, pH 2).
• Produce significant fraction of Earth's oxygen
• Biological nitrogen fixation: Nostoc, Anabaena (in paddy fields — BGA biofertiliser)
• Symbiotic with Azolla fern (important in rice cultivation)
• Harmful algal blooms (HABs) — form red/green surface scum; produce toxins
Kingdom Protista — Major Groups. Left to right: Slime mold (Myxomycetes — saprophytic, plasmodial); Amoeba (pseudopodia for movement and feeding); Euglena (flagellum + chloroplast — autotrophic in light, heterotrophic in dark); Dinoflagellate (two flagella, marine, cause red tides); Paramecium (cilia for movement, food vacuoles); Diatom (silica shell, chrysophyte, O₂ producer, oil source); Macroalga (seaweed — large multicellular alga, borderline Protista/Plantae). (Uploaded image — Legacy IAS)
Amoeboid (pseudopodia): Entamoeba histolytica → amoebiasis (dysentery), Entamoeba gingivalis (gum disease)
Flagellated: Trypanosoma → sleeping sickness (tsetse fly vector); Giardia → giardiasis; Leishmania → kala-azar
Ciliated: Paramecium → lab model organism
Sporozoans: Plasmodium → malaria (Anopheles mosquito vector)
• Cell wall of chitin (NOT cellulose like plants)
• Body organised as slender filaments called hyphae
• Network of hyphae = mycelium
• Nutrition: saprophytic (absorb nutrients from dead organic matter) — no photosynthesis, no ingestion
• Reproduce by spores (asexual) and cell fusion (sexual)
• Also occur as decomposers or parasites
| Phylum | Common Name | Hyphae | Sexual Spore | Examples | Key Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phycomycetes | Algal fungi / Lower fungi | Aseptate (no cross walls) | Zoospores | Mucor, Rhizopus (bread mould), Albugo | Rhizopus causes bread mould; used in fermentation |
| Ascomycetes | Sac fungi | Septate (with cross walls) | Ascospores (in ascus) | Aspergillus, Penicillium, Yeast (Saccharomyces), Neurospora, Morchella | Penicillium → penicillin antibiotic; Yeast → bread, alcohol; Neurospora → genetics research |
| Basidiomycetes | Club fungi | Septate | Basidiospores (on basidia) | Agaricus (mushroom), Puccinia (wheat rust), Ustilago (smut) | Agaricus = edible mushroom; Puccinia and Ustilago = major crop pathogens |
| Deuteromycetes | Imperfect fungi | Septate | None (only conidia) | Alternaria, Colletotrichum, Trichoderma | Called "imperfect" because sexual stage unknown; Alternaria causes leaf blight |
Plant Kingdom Divisions. Equiseta + Lycopodia (Pteridophytes — vascular, no seeds), Gymnosperms (pine cone — naked seeds), Angiosperms (sunflower — seeds in fruit), Ferns (Pteridophytes), Mosses (Bryophytes — no vascular tissue). (Uploaded image — Legacy IAS)
Plantae Classification Framework. Plants classified: 5 Major Divisions → Classes (vascularisation + seed development) → Orders (reproductive features) → Families (floral + fruit structures) → Genera and Species (full binomial nomenclature). (Uploaded image — Legacy IAS)
• Contain chloroplasts with chlorophyll — autotrophic (photosynthesis)
• Show alternation of generations — diploid sporophyte alternates with haploid gametophyte
• Stationary — no locomotion
• Includes: Algae, Bryophytes, Pteridophytes, Gymnosperms, Angiosperms
| Division | Common Name | Key Feature | Vascular? | Seeds? | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Algae | Seaweeds / Green algae | Aquatic, photosynthetic, no true roots/stems/leaves | ❌ | ❌ | Spirogyra, Chara, Ulva, Fucus, Kelp |
| Bryophyta | Amphibians of plant kingdom | Non-vascular; need water for reproduction; thalloid body | ❌ | ❌ | Mosses (Funaria), Liverworts (Marchantia), Hornworts |
| Pteridophyta | Seedless vascular plants | First vascular plants; reproduce by spores not seeds | ✅ | ❌ | Ferns, Equisetum (horsetail), Selaginella, Lycopodium |
| Gymnospermae | Naked seed plants | Seeds NOT enclosed in fruit (naked, on cone scales) | ✅ | ✅ (naked) | Pinus, Cycas, Gnetum, Cedrus (deodar) |
| Angiospermae | Flowering plants | Seeds enclosed in fruit; most evolved; largest group | ✅ | ✅ (enclosed) | Rose, Wheat, Mango, Tulsi, Grass |
Progression: No vascular tissue → Vascular but no seeds → Seeds but naked → Seeds enclosed in fruit (most evolved)
Special cases: Venus fly trap, Bladderwort (heterotrophic — insectivorous plants). Cuscuta (parasitic plant — yellow stem, no chlorophyll).
• Heterotrophic — nutrition by ingestion (holozoic nutrition)
• Diploid stage dominates life cycle
• Elaborate sensory, nervous, and locomotory systems
• Sexual reproduction — separate males and females (mostly)
• Most evolved kingdom — greatest morphological diversity
Kingdom Animalia — Major Phyla. Animals classified into phyla based on body plan, symmetry, coelom, segmentation, and presence of notochord. From simple (Porifera — asymmetric pores, sponges) to complex (Chordata — notochord, dorsal nerve cord — fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals). (Uploaded image — Legacy IAS)
| Phylum | Common Name | Distinguishing Feature | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Porifera | Sponges | Asymmetric, pores throughout body (osculum + ostia), water-canal system | Sycon, Spongilla, Euspongia |
| Coelenterata/Cnidaria | Jellyfish, corals, Hydra | Sac-like body, single opening (mouth), stinging cells (cnidoblasts) | Hydra, Obelia, Aurelia (jellyfish) |
| Platyhelminthes | Flatworms | Dorsoventrally flattened, acoelomate, triploblastic | Planaria, Tapeworm, Liver fluke |
| Aschelminthes/Nematoda | Roundworms | Pseudocoelomate, cylindrical, unsegmented | Ascaris (roundworm), Wuchereria (filariasis) |
| Annelida | Ringed worms | Metamerically segmented body, true coelom | Earthworm (Lumbricus), Leech, Nereis |
| Arthropoda | Jointed-leg animals | Chitinous exoskeleton, jointed appendages (largest animal phylum) | Insects (Cockroach), Spiders, Crabs, Scorpion, Butterflies |
| Mollusca | Soft-bodied animals | Soft body, calcareous shell, rasping tongue (radula) | Snails, Octopus, Pila (apple snail), Squid |
| Echinodermata | Spiny-skinned | Water vascular system, endoskeleton of calcareous plates, pentamerous symmetry | Starfish (Asterias), Sea urchin, Sea cucumber |
| Chordata | Animals with notochord | Notochord, dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal gill slits at some stage | Fish, Frogs, Snakes, Birds, Humans, Whales |
Plant viruses: TMV (Tobacco Mosaic Virus — first virus discovered). Animal viruses: Influenza, HIV, SARS-CoV-2. Bacteriophages: infect bacteria. Position outside Five Kingdoms — NOT classified in any kingdom.
- Fungi are placed in a separate kingdom from Plantae primarily because their cell walls are made of chitin rather than cellulose.
- Archaebacteria are placed in Kingdom Monera because they have prokaryotic cell structure, though they differ significantly from Eubacteria in cell wall composition and lipid structure.
- Viruses are placed in Kingdom Protista because they are the simplest form of life that can replicate independently.
- Euglena, which can photosynthesize in light but feeds heterotrophically in darkness, is classified in Kingdom Plantae due to its photosynthetic ability.
- a) 1 and 2 only
- b) 1 and 2 only ✓
- c) 1, 2 and 3 only
- d) 2 and 4 only
Statement 2 CORRECT: Whittaker placed Archaebacteria in Kingdom Monera because they are prokaryotic (no nucleus). However, Archaebacteria differ from Eubacteria in: cell wall structure (no peptidoglycan), membrane lipids (ether-linked vs ester-linked), ribosomal RNA sequences. Carl Woese later elevated this difference to domain level — separating Archaea as a completely separate domain from Bacteria.
Statement 3 WRONG: Viruses are placed in NO kingdom — they are non-cellular, acellular entities that don't fit any kingdom. They cannot replicate independently — they are obligate intracellular parasites requiring a host cell's machinery. Protista includes unicellular eukaryotes.
Statement 4 WRONG: Euglena is classified in Kingdom Protista, NOT Plantae — because it is unicellular and has heterotrophic ability. Kingdom Plantae contains multicellular, predominantly autotrophic organisms with cellulose cell walls. Euglena's dual nutrition (auto + heterotrophic) and unicellular nature make it a classic Protista, not a plant.
- (a) Lichens produce SO₂ themselves during their metabolic processes, and external SO₂ inhibits this production causing them to die when ambient SO₂ exceeds the internal production threshold
- (b) Lichens absorb SO₂ through their thallus and convert it to sulphuric acid, which accumulates to toxic levels faster than in other plants due to their lack of a protective waxy cuticle and stomata
- (c) Lichens lack the protective cuticle, stomata and detoxification enzymes that vascular plants use to limit SO₂ absorption — their entire thallus surface is exposed and both the fungal and algal components are highly sensitive to SO₂ which disrupts photosynthesis in the phycobiont and damages fungal cell membranes, causing the symbiosis to collapse at very low SO₂ concentrations
- (d) Lichens grow only where SO₂ is present in high concentrations because they use sulphur compounds as their primary nutrient source, and their absence in polluted areas is actually due to nutrient competition with SO₂-adapted bacteria
- (a) Both Rhizobium and Cyanobacteria fix nitrogen in root nodules of leguminous plants — Rhizobium fixes nitrogen in aerial root nodules while Cyanobacteria fix nitrogen in soil root nodules, providing nitrogen to different types of crops
- (b) Rhizobium is a symbiotic nitrogen fixer living in root nodules of leguminous plants (peas, beans, groundnut) where it converts atmospheric N₂ to ammonia for the plant; Cyanobacteria like Nostoc and Anabaena are free-living nitrogen fixers in soil and paddy fields (or symbiotic with Azolla fern) — Anabaena-Azolla symbiosis is particularly important as a biofertiliser in wet rice cultivation
- (c) Rhizobium and Cyanobacteria both fix nitrogen through the same mechanism — using nitrogenase enzyme in aerobic conditions; the only difference is that Rhizobium is heterotrophic while Cyanobacteria are autotrophic, meaning Cyanobacteria can fix nitrogen more efficiently since they don't require organic carbon
- (d) Cyanobacteria fix nitrogen only in the presence of leguminous plants — they require root exudates from legumes to activate their nitrogenase enzyme; without legumes in the field, Cyanobacteria remain metabolically inactive regarding nitrogen fixation
- (a) Prions produce a special enzyme that directly synthesises viral DNA from amino acids — this neo-DNA then integrates into host cell chromosomes and causes the cell to produce abnormal proteins that damage neural tissue
- (b) Prions are actually viruses so small that standard tests cannot detect their RNA — they do carry genetic information but it is protected in a unique triple-stranded RNA structure that evades conventional viral detection methods
- (c) Prions destroy brain tissue through direct toxic chemical reactions — the abnormal prion protein is highly reactive and chemically burns neural tissue through oxidative damage, progressively destroying neurons from the contact point outward
- (d) Prions work by molecular templating — the misfolded PrP protein physically contacts and induces normal host PrP proteins to misfold into the same abnormal conformation, creating a chain reaction that exponentially increases misfolded protein without any DNA/RNA; these misfolded proteins accumulate in brain tissue, forming plaques that kill neurons, creating the characteristic "spongiform" (Swiss-cheese-like) holes in the brain
| Topic | Key Facts |
|---|---|
| Taxonomy Hierarchy | D-K-P-C-O-F-G-S (Dear King Philip Came Over For Good Soup). Domain → Kingdom → Phylum → Class → Order → Family → Genus → Species. Binomial nomenclature: Carolus Linnaeus. Genus capital, species lowercase, italicised. Example: Homo sapiens, Panthera tigris. |
| Classification History | 2K (Aristotle, Plantae+Animalia) → 3K (Haeckel, +Protista) → 4K (Copeland, +Monera) → 5K (Whittaker 1969, +Fungi) → 6K (Woese 1990, Bacteria+Archaea+Eukarya). Whittaker's criteria: cell structure, body org., nutrition, reproduction, phylogeny. |
| Monera | Prokaryotic, unicellular, peptidoglycan cell wall. Circular DNA in cytoplasm. 3.5 billion years old — first life. Shapes: coccus, bacillus, vibrio, spirillum. Archaebacteria (methanogens, halophiles, thermoacidophiles) vs Eubacteria. Cyanobacteria = BGA = N-fixation (Nostoc, Anabaena). Rhizobium = symbiotic N-fixer in legume root nodules. |
| Protista | Unicellular eukaryotes. Chrysophytes: silica shells (diatoms, diatomite). Dinoflagellates: red tides, bioluminescence. Euglenoids: dual nutrition (auto+hetero), pellicle. Slime moulds: plasmodium. Protozoans: Entamoeba (dysentery), Trypanosoma (sleeping sickness), Plasmodium (malaria), Paramecium (lab model). |
| Fungi | Chitin cell wall. Hyphae → mycelium. Saprophytic. Phycomycetes (aseptate, zoospores — Rhizopus), Ascomycetes (ascospores — Penicillium, Yeast), Basidiomycetes (basidiospores — Agaricus, Puccinia), Deuteromycetes (only conidia — Alternaria). Lichens = Fungi+Algae symbiosis; bioindicators of SO₂ pollution. |
| Plantae | Eukaryotic, cellulose cell wall, chlorophyll, alternation of generations. Algae (aquatic, no roots) → Bryophyta (no vascular, amphibians of plant kingdom — Mosses, Marchantia) → Pteridophyta (vascular, no seeds — Ferns, Equisetum) → Gymnospermae (naked seeds — Pinus, Cycas) → Angiospermae (enclosed seeds, flowering — most evolved). |
| Animalia | No cell wall, heterotrophic (ingestion), diploid dominant. Key phyla: Porifera (sponges), Cnidaria (jellyfish, Hydra), Platyhelminthes (tapeworm, liver fluke), Annelida (earthworm), Arthropoda (largest phylum — insects, crabs, spiders), Mollusca (snails), Echinodermata (starfish), Chordata (notochord — fish to mammals). |
| Special Cases | Virus: acellular, DNA/RNA+protein coat, no kingdom. Viroid: circular RNA, no protein coat, plant disease (Diener 1971). Prion: misfolded protein ONLY, no DNA/RNA, template mechanism, BSE/CJD (Prusiner Nobel 1997). Lichens: Fungi+Algae symbiosis, bioindicator SO₂, pioneer species, litmus source. |
Trap 1 — "Euglena is classified in Plantae because it photosynthesises" → WRONG! Euglena is in Kingdom Protista — NOT Plantae. Although Euglena can photosynthesize in light, it is unicellular, has no cellulose cell wall (has a protein pellicle instead), and can survive as a heterotroph in darkness. Kingdom Plantae requires multicellular organisation, cellulose cell walls, and predominantly autotrophic nutrition. Euglena's dual nature (auto AND heterotrophic) and unicellular nature make it a classic Protista — the "bridge" organism.
Trap 2 — "Cyanobacteria (Blue-Green Algae) are classified in Kingdom Plantae" → WRONG! Cyanobacteria are prokaryotes in Kingdom Monera — NOT Plantae. Despite being photosynthetic, they have NO membrane-bound nucleus, NO chloroplasts (chlorophyll is in thylakoid membranes directly), and have peptidoglycan cell walls. They were historically called "Blue-Green Algae" but this name is misleading — they are bacteria, not algae. True algae (like Spirogyra, Chara) are eukaryotes in Protista or Plantae.
Trap 3 — "Fungi are classified in Plantae because they have cell walls" → WRONG! Fungi have their own kingdom because: (1) their cell walls are made of CHITIN (not cellulose); (2) they are HETEROTROPHIC (saprophytic — absorb nutrients) not autotrophic; (3) they lack chlorophyll; (4) their body is made of hyphae/mycelium — not plant organs (roots/stems/leaves). Having a cell wall alone does NOT make something a plant.
Trap 4 — "Viruses are classified in Kingdom Monera as they are the simplest organisms" → WRONG! Viruses are classified in NO kingdom — they are not organisms in the traditional sense. They are acellular, non-living outside hosts, cannot replicate independently (require host cell machinery), and have no metabolism. They don't fit in any of Whittaker's five kingdoms. UPSC sometimes tests whether students wrongly place viruses in Monera (which contains living prokaryotes like bacteria).
Trap 5 — "Arthropoda is the largest phylum because it contains the most species of insects" → PARTIALLY MISLEADING! Arthropoda is the largest animal phylum (>80% of all animal species), but it is large because it includes ALL arthropods — not just insects. Arthropoda = Insecta + Arachnida + Crustacea + Myriapoda. Within Arthropoda, Class Insecta is the largest class. Coleoptera (beetles) is the largest order of insects. The common mistake is saying "insects are the largest phylum" — the correct statement is "Arthropoda is the largest phylum, and insects (Class Insecta) are the largest class within it."


