2nd Notes Packet for Ch. 17 Flashcards
What are classification lists intended to do ?
Reflect evolutionary history
What is systematics
A branch of biology that relies on fossil record data, comparative anatomy/development, and molecular data to determine evolutionary history
What is systematics also known as
Phylogeny
How is evolutionary history often represented
Through a Phylogenetic tree or a Cladogram
What is a Phylogenetic tree
A diagram indicating lines of descent from a common ancestor
Each branching point on a phylogenetic tree is a ______ from a common _______
divergence; ancestor
What do biologists use cladograms for?
Studying the relationships among certain groups of organisms
What do cladograms show?
Two or more groups are related based on ancestral and derived characters
What is a derived character
An uncommon trait or characteristic that separates two groups; not shared
Make a list of all the possible derived characters that could be included on a cladogram
- Jaws
- Lungs
- Claws/ Nails
- Fur/ Mammary glands
Differences between cladograms and evolutionary trees: What do evolutionary trees depict
How ancestors are related to descendants and they also tell us how much the organisms have changed
Differences between cladograms and evolutionary trees: Phylogenetic trees are based on ______, rather than derived_____, and branch lengths depicts ______
ancestry; characters; time
Differences between cladograms and evolutionary trees: Diagrams that are often referred to as phylogenetic trees depict _______ over time
phylogenies
Differences between cladograms and evolutionary trees: The y-axis on the cladograms represents ______
Time
Differences between cladograms and evolutionary trees: In a cladogram, the root of each fork leads to a common _______
Ancestor