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Published byKimberly Copeland Modified over 9 years ago
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PHYLOGENY AND THE TREE OF LIFE CH 26
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I. Phylogenies show evolutionary relationships A. Binomial nomenclature: – Genus + species name Homo sapiens
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B. Hierarchical classification Specific similarities Broad similarities
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II. Overview of phylogeny The evolutionary history of a species or related species Results in the creation of evolutionary trees Uses fossil evidence, physical characteristics, and molecular similarities to create phylogenetic trees that show evolutionary relationships The more similar the physical characteristics or sequences are the more closely related the organism are Phylogenetic trees represent hypotheses about the evolutionary relationships between species Each branch point represents the divergence of species from the common ancestor
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A. Linking classification to phylogeny
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B. Linking time to Phylogeny
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How do we know age? – Radioactive dating of rocks and fossils based on radioisotope half life – Location in the Earth’s layers – DNA sequence analysis: using genetic divergence to estimate age
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C. Phylogenies are Inferred from morphological and molecular data homologous structures show shared ancestry gene sequences shared by a common ancestor are also homologous
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III. Shared characters are used to construct phylogenetic trees Cladistics groups organisms by common descent
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A clade: includes all of a species and their common ancestor Monophyletic group : includes ancestral species and all of its descendants Paraphyletic group: includes ancestral species and some but not all descendants Polyphyletic group: includes various species with different ancestors
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Constructing a phylogenetic tree based on homology jawslungsamniotic egg furbinocular vision bipedal lamprey000000 shark100000 salamander110000 lizard111000 tiger111100 gorilla111110 human111111
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The branch points represent the common ancestor The characteristics are derived characteristics: homology Can use physical characteristics for a broad cladogram Can use DNA comparisons for a more narrow cladogram (primate evolution) – The more similar the sequence, the more recent the common ancestor – The more distant the common ancestor, the more time there was for mutations to take place
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III. Problems reconstructing phylogenies Not all similar traits are homologous, the result of divergent evolution (synaptomorphy) Synaptomorphy = a trait that is similar among species because the common ancestor of those species had that trait Some traits evolved by convergent evolution = homoplasy
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Then how can we accurately create phylogenetic trees? Must use many traits to construct phylogenetic tree If don’t distinguish between homoplasy and homology you will with wrong conclusions homology is more reliable than homoplasy BUT must be able to distinguish between them
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Parsimony and constructing phylogenetic trees Parsimony: criteria used to construct phylogenetic trees based on minimizing the number of changes
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