Stub

This page is a stub, meaning it is incomplete. Help expand it by commenting or create a new issue on the git!

Tri-criterial classification is a theory of taxonomic classification of organisms now widely considered obsolete which posed that organisms may be classified according to three criteria; body plan, historic niche, and diet. Originally proposed by Famous Taxonomer the theory would go on to create a legacy, only recently being outdated by the onset of evolutionary classification.

History

Criterion

Tri-criterial classification organizes organisms into groups based off of their

Diet

  • Avores, organisms which do not consume biological matter.
  • Consumers, which can be split into two groups;
    • Avovores, organisms which consume avoric organisms;
    • Bionivores, organisms which consume non-animate biological matter.
  • Carnivores, organisms which consume consumers.

Body Plan

  • Plants, organisms which do not move.
    • Rooted, organisms which attach to objects using sub-surface roots.
    • Sessile, organisms which attach to objects at the surface.
  • Animals, organisms which do move.
    • Quadrupeds, organisms which use 4 limbs for locomotion.
    • Bipeds, organisms which use 2 limbs for locomotion.
    • Scuttlers, organisms which use 5 or more limbs for locomotion.
    • Serpents, organisms which use no limbs for locomotion.

Niche

  • Expansionists, organisms which originally served to autonomously expand territory.
  • Defenders, organisms which originally served to autonomously defend territory.
  • Offenders, organisms which originally served to autonomously attack territory.
  • Scouts, organisms which originally served to gauge the safety of a territory.
  • Disruptors, organisms which originally snuck into opposing territories as agents of chaos.
  • Symbionts, organisms which function by pairing closely with other organisms.
  • Devastator, organisms specializing in heavy artillery, originally functioned to cause mass destruction.

Significance

Tri-criterial classification is the first widely accepted taxonomic classification of organisms and changed many widely held beliefs and perceptions regarding flora and fauna.

See Also