Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
SYSTEMATICS • The study of biological diversity in an evolutionary context • encompasses both taxonomy and phylogeny Taxonomy • Two main objectives: – to sort out organisms into species – to classify species into higher taxonomic levels • Species that appear to be closely related are grouped into the same genus. • the leopard, Panthera pardus, belongs to a genus that includes the African lion (Panthera leo) and the tiger (Panthera tigris). • Taxon = a named taxonomic unit at any level; (taxa = plural) – ex: Mammalia is a taxon at the Class level 3 TAXONOMY • taxonomic system developed by Linnaeus in the 18th century – binomial = Genus species – classification system • • • • • • • • Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus species Eukarya Animalia Chordata Mammalia Primates Hominidae Homo sapiens Limitations of the Linnean System Many hierarchies are being re-examined based on the results of molecular analysis -Linnaean taxonomy does not take into account evolutionary relationships -The phylogenetic and systematic revolution is underway 5 PHYLOGENY • Hypothesis of the evolutionary history of a group • represented by pictures: phylogenetic trees – time goes from the bottom up – read from bottom up, NOT LEFT TO RIGHT – branch “length” = the number of changes Phylogenies depict evolutionary relationships 10 • Phylogenetic trees reflect the hierarchical classification of taxonomic groups nested within more inclusive groups. Fig. 25.8 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Approaches to Constructing Phylogenies • Cladistics – uses shared derived characteristics (synapomorphies) to classify organisms – Not shared ancestral characteristics, not overall similarity • Because evolution is not steady paced, not unidirectional, may be convergent Cladistics Examples of ancestral versus derived characters • Presence of hair is a shared derived feature of mammals • Presence of lungs in mammals is an ancestral feature; also present in amphibians and reptiles 14 Cladistics A Cladogram; DNA 17 Cladistics A Cladogram: DNA 18 Approaches to Constructing Phylogenies • Traditional approaches – Used overall similarities – Characters are weighted by the taxonomist PHYLOGENY • systematists prefer monophyletic taxa – a single ancestor gave rise to all species in that taxon and to no species in any other taxa Systematics and Classification Monophyletic Group 23 Systematics and Classification Paraphyletic Group 24 Systematics and Classification Polyphyletic Group 25 Systematics and Classification Old plant classification system 26 Systematics and Classification New plant classification system 27 Evidence used to reconstruct phylogenies • Comparative anatomy, morphology, embryology, etc. – problems of homology vs homoplasy (analogy) • homology = likeness due to common ancestry • homoplasy or analogy = likeness due to convergent evolution Comparative Biology Distribution of saber-toothed mammals 32 Can Have Homoplastic Molecular Data A Cladogram: DNA 34 Evidence used to reconstruct phylogenies • Protein comparisons • DNA comparisons – DNA-DNA hybridization, restriction mapping, DNA sequencing Character Mapping • Once you have a phylogeny you can trace the evolution of characters or traits in that group • use the rules of parsimony – the simplest is the best Parsimony and Homoplasy 39 Phylogenetic Trees are Hypotheses Grouping Organisms Carl Woese proposed a six-kingdom system Prokaryotes Eukaryotes 41 KINGDOMS • Monera = Archaebacteria & Eubacteria – prokaryotic • Protista – eukaryotic • Plantae – eukaryotic, multicellular, autotrophic, cell walls • Fungi – eukaryotic, multicellular, heterotrophic, cell walls • Animalia – eukaryotic, multicellular, heterotrophic, no cell walls 45