Topic 5.4 Cladistics Flashcards
Cladistics
A method of classifying organisms into groups of species called clades.
Clade
Consists of one ancestral organism and all of its evolutionary descendants.
- Members of one clade will possess common characteristics (because of shared evolutionary lineage)
- Organized according to branching diagrams (cladograms) to show evolutionary relationships
Cladograms
Tree diagrams where each branch point represents the splitting of two new groups from a common ancestor.
- One node (branch point) represents one speciation event (formation of distinct species formed via divergent evolution)
- Show probable sequence of divergence, demonstrating likely evolutionary histories (phylogenies) of clades
Cladograms with humans and other primates
Evolutionary relationships between humans and other primates: they share a common ancestry.
- Humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans, and gibbons belong to a common clade (hominoids)
- Hominoid clae forms a part of a larger Anthropoids clade (including Old and New World monkeys)
Features of cladograms
- Roots: an initial ancestor common to all organisms within the cladogram
- Nodes: each corresponds to a hypothetical common ancestor that speciated
- Outgroup: the most distantly-related species in the cladogram; functions as a point of comparison and reference group
- Clades: common ancestor and all of its descendants
Construction of cladograms
Done so utilizing structural evidence (ex. physical characteristics) or molecular evidence.
Molecular evidence in evolution
All organisms use DNA and RNA, genetic material and the genetic code by which proteins are synthesized is (almost) universal.
- Base and amino acid sequences can thus be compared to ascertain levels of relatedness
Comparing molecular evidence
- Number of differences between comparable base sequences demonstrates the degree of evolutionary divergence (greater differences suggest more time since divergence, lesser differences suggest closer relation)
- Non-coding DNA occur more readily, providing best means of comparison (typically utilized to compare closely-related organisms)
- Gene sequences mutate slower, as changes in base sequence can affect protein structure/function
- Amino acid sequences have slowest rate of change due to codon degeneracy (typically utilized to compare distinctly-related species)
Molecular clock
Genes or protein sequences may accumulate mutations at a relatively constant rate. If it is reliable, scientists can calculate the time of divergence according to the number of differences.
Limiting factors of a molecular clock
- Different genes or proteins may change at different rates
- The rate of change for a particular gene may differ between different groups of organisms
- Over long periods, earlier changes may be reversed by later changes, potentially confounding the accuracy of predictions