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Taxonomy & Phylogeny

Explore the traditional Linnaean classification, two theories of taxonomy, reading cladograms, and more in this tutorial. Understand the evolution of naming species and classifying their relationships.

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Taxonomy & Phylogeny

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  1. Taxonomy & Phylogeny Introduction Classification Phylogeny Cladograms Quiz

  2. In this tutorial, you will learn: • The traditional classification scheme of Linnaeus. • Two theories of taxonomy: • Traditional evolutionary taxonomy • Cladistics • How to read a cladogram Credits: Figures and images by N. Wheat unless otherwise noted. Image of Linnaeus from Wikipedia Funded by Title V-STEM grant P031S090007.

  3. Introduction • The practice of categorizing organisms according to similar features goes back to Aristotle. • The goal of Taxonomy today is to produce a formal system for naming and classifying species to illustrate their evolutionary relationships.

  4. Classification • In classification, the taxonomist asks whether the species being classified contains the defining feature of a certain taxonomic grouping. • Focus is on features.

  5. Systematization • In systematization, the taxonomist asks whether the characteristics of a species support the hypothesis that it descends from the most recent common ancestor of the taxonomic group. • Focus is on evolutionary origin of those features.

  6. Linnaeus and Classification • In the 18th century, Carolus Linnaeus designed the hierarchical classification system still in use today. • Kingdom • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Genus • Species

  7. Taxa • Taxa(singular = taxon) are the major groups of organisms. • Each rank can be subdivided into additional levels of taxa. • Superclass, suborder, etc.

  8. Binomial Nomenclature • Binomial nomenclature is the system Linnaeus developed for naming species. • The two-part scientific name includes the genus and species • Names are latinized and italicized, only the genus is capatilized. • Sitta carolinensis

  9. Phylogeny • The goal of systematicsis to determine the phylogeny – the evolutionary history – of a species or group of related species.

  10. Phylogeny (2) • Phylogenies are inferred by identifying organismal features, characters, that vary among species. • These characters can be: • Morphological • Chromosomal • Molecular • Behavioral or ecological

  11. Homology • Homologouscharacters are shared characters that result from common ancestry.

  12. Homoplasy • Homoplasiesare shared characters that are not a result of common ancestry, but of independent evolution of similar characters (they are not homologous). • Can result from convergent evolution.

  13. Convergent Evolution • Convergent evolution occurs when natural selection, working under similar environmental pressures, produces similar (analogous) adaptations in organisms from different evolutionary lineages.

  14. Phylogeny • When trying to determine evolutionary relationships (inferring a phylogeny), we only want to consider homologous characters. • Homoplasies can create errors.

  15. Shared Primitive and Shared Derived Characteristics • Focusing on homologous structures, we need to determine when that character arose. • Newer characters tell us more! • Primitive (older) vs. derived (newer) characters

  16. Shared Primitive Characteristics • A shared primitive character is a homologous structure that is older than the branching of a particular clade from other members of that clade. • It is shared by more than just the taxon we are trying to define. • Example – mammals all have a backbone, but so do other vertebrates.

  17. Shared Derived Characteristics • A shared derived character is a new evolutionary feature, unique to a particular group. • Example - all mammals have hair, and no other animals have hair. • These are the features that are most useful for determining evolutionary relationships!

  18. Ancestral Character States • The ancestralcharacter state is the form of the character that was present in the common ancestor of the group. • Variations of the character that arose later are called derived character states.

  19. Polarity • Polarity(which version of the trait is ancestral) is determined by using outgroup comparison. • An outgroup is closely related, but not part of the group being examined (the ingroup).

  20. Polarity (2) • An ancestralcharacter is one that is found in both the study group and the outgroup. • Derived character groups are those found in the study groups but not the outgroups.

  21. Clades • Clades are groups that share derived characters and form a subset within a larger group. • A clade is a unit of common evolutionary descent.

  22. Synapomorphy • A synapomorphy is a derived character that is shared by all the members of the clade. • Using synapomorphies to define clades will result in a nested hierarchy of clades.

  23. Symplesiomorphy • Ancestral character states for a taxon are called plesiomorphic. • Symplesiomorphies are shared ancestral characters. • Symplesiomorphies do not provide useful information for forming a nested series of clades.

  24. Cladogram • The nested hierarchy of clades can be shown as a cladogram that is based on synapomorphies.

  25. Monophyletic • A valid clade is monophyletic, it consists of the ancestor species and all its descendants.

  26. Paraphyletic • A paraphyletic clade consists of an ancestral species and some, but not all, of the descendants.

  27. Polyphyletic • A polyphyletic clade includes many species that lack a common ancestor.

  28. Cladistics • Cladistics, also called phylogenetic systematics, is a taxonomic theory that is based on cladograms. • All taxa must be monophyletic!

  29. Evolutionary Taxonomy • Traditional Evolutionary taxonomy is based on common descent and the amount of evolutionary change to rank higher taxa. • Sometimes this type of classification includes paraphyleticgroupings.

  30. Cladistics (2) • Since all groupings must be monophyletic in cladistics, the paraphyletic arrangement of ape families doesn’t work. • Humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans are now all included together in one monophyletic family - Hominidae.

  31. Sister Groups • A sister group is a pair of taxa that are most closely related to each other. • Humans are most closely related to chimpanzees, so humans & chimpanzees form a sister group. • Gorillas form a sister group to the clade containing humans and chimpanzees.

  32. Cladistics vs. Evolutionary Taxonomy • The important difference between these two theories of taxonomy is that traditional evolutionary taxonomy sometimes accepts paraphyletic clades, while cladistics does not. • Both accept monophyletic clades. • Both reject polyphyletic clades.

  33. Question 1 Who developed the classification system including the binomial scientific name in use today? • Darwin • Mendel • Linnaeus • Aristotle

  34. Question 1 Sorry! • That is incorrect. • Try again!

  35. Question 1 Congratulations! • You are correct!

  36. Question 2 Which of the following are considered to be taxa? • Phylum • Class • Family • Species • All of the above

  37. Question 2 Sorry! • That is incorrect. • Try again!

  38. Question 2 Congratulations! • You are correct!

  39. Question 3 Which example of binomial nomenclature is formatted correctly? • Homo sapiens • homo sapiens • Homo Sapiens • Homo Sapiens • It doesn’t matter, they are all correct

  40. Question 3 Sorry! • That is incorrect. • Try again!

  41. Question 3 Congratulations! • You are correct!

  42. Question 4 Which of these terms is associated with characters that share common ancestry. • Homology • Convergent evolution • Homoplasy • Analogy • All of the above

  43. Question 4 Sorry! • That is incorrect. • Try again!

  44. Question 4 Congratulations! • You are correct!

  45. Question 5 When defining a clade, what type of characters should we use? • Homoplasies • Shared primitive characters = symplesiomorphies • Shared derived characters = synapomorphies • All of the above

  46. Question 5 Sorry! • That is incorrect. • Try again!

  47. Question 5 Congratulations! • You are correct!

  48. Question 6 The branching diagram that illustrates the nesting hierarchy of clades is called a • Family tree • Cladogram • Phylogenetic diagram • Taxonomic web

  49. Question 6 Sorry! • That is incorrect. • Try again!

  50. Question 6 Congratulations! • You are correct!

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