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Chapter 2 Opener How do we classify organisms?
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Figure 2.1 Tracing the path of evolution to Homo sapiens from the universal ancestor of all life
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Figure 2.2 The tree of life
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Figure 2.3 Darwin’s representation of hypothetical phylogenetic relationships
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Figure 2.4 A phylogenetic tree of human, chimpanzee, and bonobo taxa, illustrating major phylogenetic terms
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Figure 2.5 Different representations of phylogenies
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Figure 2.6 Phylogenetic analyses often use unrooted trees, which are converted to rooted trees
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Figure 2.7 Phylogenetic analysis has revealed the relationships of some formerly puzzling organisms
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Figure 2.8 Phylogenetically informative and uninformative similarities among species
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Figure 2.9 Monophyletic groups whose members share derived character states that evolved only once
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Figure 2.10 Two possible hypotheses for the phylogenetic relationships of humans
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Figure 2.11 Steps in a phylogenetic analysis using the maximum parsimony method
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Figure 2.12 Members of the primate superfamily Hominoidea
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Figure 2.13 Evidence for phylogenetic relationships among primates
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Table 2.1
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Figure 2.14 How long branches can lead a parsimony analysis astray
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Figure 2.14 How long branches can lead a parsimony analysis astray (Part 1)
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Figure 2.14 How long branches can lead a parsimony analysis astray (Part 2)
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Figure 2.15 A two-parameter model in which the rate of transition differs from the rate of transversion
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Figure 2.16 Relationships among hominoid primates, based on a maximum likelihood analysis of sequences of two genes
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Figure 2.17 The true phylogeny of the experimental populations of T7 bacteriophage studied by Hillis et al.
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Figure 2.18 Relationships among vertebrates, as estimated from morphological characters and DNA sequences
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Figure 2.19 Base pair differences time since divergence suggests a fairly constant rate of sequence evolution
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Figure 2.20 The relative rate test for constancy of the rate of molecular divergence
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Figure 2.21 Proportions of base pairs at different codon positions in the DNA sequences of COI that differ between vertebrate species pairs, against time since their most recent common ancestor
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Figure 2.22 Results of a study of divergence times for some lineages of primates
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Figure 2.23 Relationships among haplotypes of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene in MacGillivray’s warbler
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Figure 2.24 Phylogenies of some Old World monkeys and cats
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Figure 2.25 A gene tree may or may not reflect the true phylogeny of the species from which the genes are sampled
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Figure 2.25 A gene tree may or may not reflect the true phylogeny of the species from which the genes are sampled (Part 1)
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Figure 2.25 A gene tree may or may not reflect the true phylogeny of the species from which the genes are sampled (Part 2)
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Figure 2.25 A gene tree may or may not reflect the true phylogeny of the species from which the genes are sampled (Part 3)
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Figure 2.26 Four species of grasshoppers inferred from multiple samples of each of six genes in each species
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Figure 2.27 Relationships among 11 species of placental mammals, which represent four major clades
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Figure 2.28 Rapid evolutionary radiation
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Figure 2.29 Hybridization and reticulate evolution
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Figure 2.30 Chimpanzees and gorillas carry several clades of the parasite Plasmodium, from which human P. falciparum is derived
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