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Cladistics 5.4
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Cladistics Practice of creating phylogenic trees based upon shared characteristics. Phylogenics is the study of evolutionary relationships between organisms.
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Clades Groups of organisms that share a common ancestor.
Include all the living, ancestral species, and any extinct species that came between.
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Identifying Clade Members
Most cladograms are constructed using molecular comparisons. The more similar a base sequence between to species, the closer they are related.
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Molecular Clock Differences in base sequences between species appear due to mutation. Mutations happen at a steady rate. Scientists can look at the number of mutations between two species and reason how long ago they were similar.
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Comparative Anatomy Cladograms used to be completed using comparative anatomy. Problematic due to analogous structures and homologous structures.
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Analogous Structures Structures that are similar in function, but are evolved in unrelated species. Result of convergent evolution.
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Homologous Structures
Structures that develop from similar tissue and have same makeup, but different functions. Due to divergent evolution.
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Cladograms Tree like diagrams that are based on clades.
Based on parsimony, the less changes the better. Nodes are branch points that represent ancestors who split off to form 2 new species.
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As you go up the cladogram, organisms develop new traits
As you go up the cladogram, organisms develop new traits. These traits are called derived traits/ characteristics.
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Reclassification Early clades were constructed using comparative anatomy. Clades have been redone using molecular methods.
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