Taxonomy provides a way of characterising living things
and documenting family relationships.
Our planet is teeming with perhaps 100 million species (though
estimates vary wildly), but only about 1.4 million have actually
been named.
With so many species there has to be a system of classifying
them. The most common system of classification is that developed by
a naturalist called Linnaeus in the 18th century.
This system is known as taxonomy and divides organisms into
ranks or 'taxa': kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and
species. Usually we stick to genus and species when talking about
organisms, such as E. coli (gut bacterium) or Homo sapiens
(humans).
The Red Admiral butterfly, for example, is known as Vanessa
atalanta in taxonomic terms. Its full classification is as
follows:
Kingdom: animalia
Phylum: arthropoda
Class: insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: nymphalidae
Genus: Vanessa
Species: atalanta
Over time, biological classifications change due to improved
techniques and better knowledge about the biology and the
evolutionary relationships of different living things. Nowadays,
species are often subdivided into different subspecies or
strains.
Since physical characteristics are derived from genes, genetic
analysis is increasingly used to analyse relationships between
organisms.