Chapter 22 Flashcards
Ancestral Trait
The trait originally present in the ancestor of a given group; may be retained or changed in the descendants of that ancestor.
Binomial Nomenclature
A taxonomic naming system in which each species is given two names (a genus name followed by a species name).
Clade
A monophyletic group made up of an ancestor and all of its descendants
Convergent Evolution
Independent evolution of similar features from different ancestral traits.
Derived Trait
A trait that differs from the ancestral trait. (Contrast with shared derived trait.)
Evolutionary Reversal
The reappearance of an ancestral trait in a group that had previously acquired a derived trait.
Genus
A group of related, similar species recognised by taxonomists with a distinct name used in binomial nomenclature.
Homolog
(1) In cytogenetics, one of a pair (or larger set) of chromosomes having the same overall genetic composition and sequence. In diploid organisms, each chromosome inherited from one parent is matched by an identical (except for mutational changes) chromosome—its homolog—from the other parent. (2) In evolutionary biology, one of two or more features in different species that are similar by reason of descent from a common ancestor.
Homoplasy
The presence in multiple groups of a trait that is not inherited from the common ancestor of those groups. Can result from convergent evolution, evolutionary reversal, or parallel evolution.
Ingroup
In a phylogenetic study, the group of organisms of primary interest. (Contrast with outgroup.)
Maximum Likelihood
A statistical method of determining which of two or more hypotheses (such as phylogenetic trees) best fit the observed data, given an explicit model of how the data were generated.
Molecular Clock
The approximately constant rate of divergence of macromolecules from one another over evolutionary time; used to date past events in evolutionary history.
Monophyyletic
Pertaining to a group that consists of an ancestor and all of its descendants. (Contrast with paraphyletic, polyphyletic.)
Outgroup
In phylogenetics, a group of organisms used as a point of reference for comparison with the groups of primary interest (the ingroup).
Paraphyletic
ertaining to a group that consists of an ancestor and some, but not all, of its descendants. (Contrast with monophyletic, polyphyletic.)