The Bilateria and Bilaterian Phylogeny Flashcards
Taxonomy
- the art of classification
- creating division sets for entities to exist in, and naming each set
- applied to almost anything
- often relies upon phylogeny
phylogeny
- designed to elucidate the evolutionary relationships between one clade and another
- can only be reconstructed if the phylogenetic element has evolved
- aka evolutionary tree
Give some examples of evolved entities
- a living organism
- a virus
- language
Sometimes, morphological and genetic data are taken in tandem as
‘total evidence’.
Morphological classification generally relies upon
a series of phenetic characteristics.
Give some frequently employed morphological characteristics factored into taxonomy
- symmetry (radial, bilateral, or absent)
- germ layers (endoderm, mesoderm or exoderm)
- body cavities
- segmentation
- embryo cleavage (radial, or spiral).
What is a body cavity?
fluid filled spaced found in the body often lined by a waterproof barrier of epithelial cells
Describe radial embryonic cleave
with a vertical mitotic spindle
Describe spiral embryonic cleave
with a diagonal mitotic spindle
Give some disadvantages to Phenetic classification
- secondary loss
- convergent evolution
- character number (especially character loss)
secondary loss
aka reversion
When the first invertebrate phylogenetic tree was being reconstructed, the … was used.
18 Small Subunit ribosomal ribonucleic acid (S rRNA)
What are the ‘three great clades’ of Bilateria
- Lophotrochozoa
- Ecdysozoa
- Deuterostomia
Why was 18S rRNA used?
- common functionality
- small length
- useful and easy in experiments
Give some examples of the Lophotrochozoans
- Annelids
- Bryozoans
- Molluscs
- Nemerteans (ribbon worms)
- Platyhelminths (flatworms)