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Fish Systematics: How does this stuff work?? Study of fish diversity and the evolutionary relationships among populations, species and higher taxa Chapter 2 (Helfman, Collette & Facey) Why Systematics? • • • • • Organization Basis for identification Discrimination Understanding relationships Common language! Systematics • Understand patterns of diversity – How? ...in the context of evolutionary and ecological theory. – trends in where fish groups are found (spatial distribution) – trends in emergence/extinction of evolutionary groups Systematics • Sample questions: • What has favored/allowed greater diversity of fishes on coral reefs than in lakes? • What has allowed/favored cypriniforms, siluriforms and characiforms to become so diverse? • What factors have allowed/favored the persistence of ancient taxa in the Mississippi River basin (bowfin, gar, paddlefish, etc.)? • What is the evolutionary (phylogenetic) relationship between salmon and pike? Subdisciplines in Systematics • Taxonomy - the theory and practice of describing, identifying and classifying taxa (groups of phylogenetically related organisms) – Taxonomy can be predictive!! • Nomenclature - the naming of taxonomic groups • Classification - organizing taxa into like groupings What is a Species? • C. Tate. Regan (1926) (20th Century) “A community, or a number of related communities whose distinctive morphologyical characters are, in the opinion of a competent systematist, sufficiently definite to entitle it, or them to a specific name.” Focus of Systematics on Species • Historically, understanding species* most common: *group of organisms that can reproduce and generate viable offspring • Today, emphasis is below species level (why?) – Endangered Species Act: • applies to distinct population segment of a species which interbreeds when mature Species Concepts • Morphological (Linnaeus): the smallest group of individuals that look different from each other. – can misclassify based on differences that can be maintained within an interbreeding group – depends only on observable morphological differences Species Concepts • Biological (Mayr): group of populations of individuals that are similar in form and function and that are reproductively isolated from other populations – – – – conventional definition until late 1980’s includes genetic information ignores hybridization dependent on geographic isolation to achieve species status Species Concepts • Evolutionary (Wiley): a population or group of populations that shares a common evolutionary fate and historical tendencies – recognizes more than just genetic and morphological differences – difficult to determine “evolutionary fate” – how much diversity is allowed within a common evolutionary fate? – Nelson 1999 Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries Species Concepts • Phylogenetic: the smallest biological unit appropriate for phylogenetic analysis (process that rates traits as ancestral (plesiomorphes) or derived (apomorphies) and then looks for groupings based on similarities (shared, synapomorphies) – does not infer modes of speciation – nothing is arbitrary – depends on thorough phylogenetic analysis first Species Concepts • Usefulness of each concept depends on the use - for Endangered Species Act, use as much evidence as possible: – – – – – – morphological, physiological, behavioral geographic life history & development habitat & feeding ecology phylogenetics evolutionary fate Determining Relationships Between Taxa • Traditional: examine and list primitive to advanced, link groups based on a few arbitrary traits, generate lineage model based on these limited data Determining Relationships Between Taxa • Phenetics: multivariate statistical approach: – assemble list of traits – determine degree of similarity among groups based on number of similar traits – ignores evolutionary linkage of groups (convergence could put evolutionarily distinct lines into a single taxon) Determining Relationships Between Taxa • Phylogenetic (cladistic): – assemble a list of traits – classify each taxonomic group on basis of presence or absence of each trait – determine degree of similarity among groups based on shared and unique traits: Determining Relationships Between Taxa • Phylogenetic (cladistic), continued: – determine degree of similarity among groups based on shared and unique traits: 1. shared traits = plesiomorphic traits (ancestral) 2. unique traits = apomorphic traits (derived) 3. shared unique traits = synapomorphic traits – monophyletic group of taxa (common origin) = clade Cladograms • Phylogenetic relationships expressed in cladograms - branching representation of the evolutionary relationships among taxa based on shared common traits and shared unique traits Constructing a Cladogram • • • • Listing of traits Coding of each taxon by presence/absence of each trait Assemble groupings based on trait conditions Use the simplest branching structure possible: principle of parsimony More on traits... • Meritic-count it! • Morphometric-measurable shape fin length eye shape ratios between such measures... anatomical characteristics molecular characteristics head length Which traits do I use? Speciation • How do populations become distinct species? - the process whereby gene flow is reduced sufficiently between sister populations to allow each to become different evolutionary lineages – Allopatric (with geographic isolation) – Non-allopatric (without geographic isolation) Speciation • Allopatric (with geographic isolation) speciation: – Vicariant - large populations geographically isolated (little inbreeding) (United States) – Founder - small population becomes geographically isolated and then reproductively isolated via inbreeding, selection, drift (Gilligan’s Island) – Reinforcement - early isolation followed by sympatry, but selection against hybrids Speciation • Non-allopatric (without geographic isolation) – Sympatric - sister species evolve within the dispersal range of each other, but adapt to different habitats - habitat-dependent assortive mating (tribes) – Parapatric - sister species evolve in segregated habitats across a narrow contact zone - little mixing in spite of proximity Final synthesis on “species” • Groupings that are different from each other: – morphology, behavior, physiology, ecology • Reproduction is isolated in practice • Mating systems and mate-recognition systems are important enforcers of isolation