Lecture 18 Flashcards
1
Q
Taxonomy
A
- how you actually classify something
- not the same thing as systematics
2
Q
Systematics
A
- how they’re related to other organisms
- without this can’t really understand evolutionary events
- the study of phylogeny, the evolutionary relationships among organisms
3
Q
Linnaeus
A
- hierarchial classification
- left a gap in his process
- no human type?
- not evolutionary; it’s a classification-how you put them into drawers
- don’t need genetics to do this; look at anatomy
- species don’t change or transform into anything else–>they’re eternal
- based on formal structure motifs using anatomic comparisons, not genetic links
- typological-each species represents an ideal form, each species based on a type specimen
4
Q
The Origin of Species
A
- doesn’t have any pictures except for his phylogenetic tree that said all life on earth had a common ancestor
- natural selection and phylogeny were his two main points
5
Q
Monophyly
A
- single common ancestor of your clade
- all clades must be this
6
Q
Polyphyly
A
- if you actually knew evolutionary history you would know that one species that closely resembles others is actually arisen from a different clade
- the concept of the panda is this kind of solution
- no such thing as a “panda” it’s made up
7
Q
Paraphyly
A
- have a taxon that’s monophyletic but it doesn’t contain all the descendants of the common ancestor
- broke a monophyletic clade into two clades and neither one contains all the descendants from the common ancestor
- if you do this you define a grade
- ex: reptiles–>paraphyletic concept because we haven’t considered all the descendants of the common ancestor of this clade
8
Q
Phenetics
A
-take a simple list of features and classify by that
9
Q
Cladistics
A
- what you really have to do is look for monophyletic clades
- should actually reflect the branching patterns that you see when you’re setting this up
- use shared derived features–>synaptomorphies
- devised by Willi Henning
- idea that phylogeny should reflect the branching pattern among lineages by using shared, derived features
10
Q
Symplesiomorphies
A
- shared primitive features–>homologies
- helps you separate from clades below but not within clade that has feature
11
Q
Autapomorphies
A
- derived features not shared by other lineages
- not useful in making up clade diagram
- not helpful in finding out where organisms/group lies in tree at all
12
Q
Classification-Oldest
A
-based on simple similarity would put whales with fish, bats with birds
13
Q
What is a phylogenetic tree?
A
- root=base of tree; can connect to related clades outside to the clade being considred-outside clades called outgroups
- branches=connections between basal (ancestral) and terminal nodes (descendants); the higher up the branching, the closer the relationship
- nodes rotate freely
14
Q
Phylogenetic Trees
A
- present hypotheses about evolutionary relationships based on interpretations of fossils, comparative anatomy, homology, and ideas about how evolution works
- kinds of data shown: time scale, origin, divergence pattern, extinction, biogeography, environment, and hypotheses about mechanisms of evolution
15
Q
Grade vs. Clade
A
-clade: the descendants of an ancestral species; can tie to classification by assigning to an appropriate taxon