Ch 23: Systematics, Phylogenies, & Comparative Biology Flashcards
Phylogeny
-Hypothesis about patterns of relationships among species
Systematics
- The reconstruction and study of evolutionary relationships. -Biologists group organisms based on shared characteristics & newer molecular sequence data. -since fossil records are not complete scientists rely on other types of evidence to determine evolutionary relationships.
Cladogram
- A tree of similarities and differences between species
- Depicts a hypothesis of evolutionary relationships
Branching Tree
Darwin: all species come from a single common ancestor; history can be depicted as a branching tree.
Problem W/ Phylogeny based on similarities.
- Similarity may not accurately predict evolutionary relationships
- Rates of evolution vary
- Evolution may not be unidirectional
- Evolution is not always divergent
Convergent Evolution
Similar characteristics not derived from common ancestry
Derived characteristic
Similarity that is inherited from the most recent common ancestor of an entire group.
Ancestral characteristics
Similarities that arose prior to the common ancestor of the group.
Synapomorphies
- Derived characters shared by clade members
- In cladistics, only shared derived characteristics are considered informative about evolutionary relationships
Cladistic Method
- Requires that character variation be identified as ancestral or derived.
- Characters can be any aspect of the phenotype including morphology, physiology, behavior, and DNA
Character States
- Presents vs. absence
- Example: character “teeth” in amniote vertebrates have two states: present in most mammals and reptiles, and absent in birds and turtles
Outgroup Comparison
Usually avail fossils don’t rep most recent common ancestor:
outgroup comparison used to assign character polarity.
Outgroup: - A species/group of species, but not member of group studied. - When group studied shows multi. character states, & 1 is shown by outgroup, state is ancestral and others are derived. - Outgroup species do not always exhibit the ancestral condition.
Clade
Species that share a common ancestor- shown by the having shared derived characters.
Plesiomorphies
Ancestral character states.
Symplesiomorphies
- Shared ancestral states (shared plesiomorphies)
- reflect character states inherited from distant ancestor. Do not imply that species exhibiting state are closely related