* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download phylogenetic tree.
Molecular cloning wikipedia , lookup
Genealogical DNA test wikipedia , lookup
Pathogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Minimal genome wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Mitochondrial DNA wikipedia , lookup
Maximum parsimony (phylogenetics) wikipedia , lookup
Extrachromosomal DNA wikipedia , lookup
DNA barcoding wikipedia , lookup
Non-coding DNA wikipedia , lookup
Metagenomics wikipedia , lookup
Transitional fossil wikipedia , lookup
Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Microevolution wikipedia , lookup
Chapter 26 You Must Know The taxonomic categories and how they indicate relatedness. How systematics is used to develop phylogenetic trees. How to construct a phylogenetic tree that represents processes of biological evolution. The three domains of life, including their similarities and their differences. The significance of widely conserved processes across the three domains. Evolutionary Relationships Phylogeny is the evolutionary history of a species or a group of related species. It is constructed by using evidence from systematics, a discipline that focuses on classifying organisms and their evolutionary relationships. Its tools include fossils, morphology, genes, and molecular evidence. Taxonomy is an ordered division of organisms into categories based on a set of characteristics used to assess similarities and differences. Binomial nomenclature uses a two-part naming system that consists of the genus to which the species belongs as well as the organisms’ species within the genus, such as Canis familiaris, the scientific name of the common dog. Hierarchical Classification Domain Most General Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Specific * The degree of relatedness increases with each successive level down (the organisms share more common traits. Systematists use branching diagrams called phylogenetic trees to depict hypotheses about evolutionary relationships. The branches of such trees reflect the hierarchical classifications of groups nested within more inclusive groups. Phylogenetic Trees Each number represents a common ancestor of the two braches. Can you mark the point where all carnivores shared a common ancestor? Trees show patterns of descent, not phenotypic similarity. They do not show the age of the particular species. It is very important for you to be able to work with phylogenetic trees!! Redraw this tree, rotating the branches around branch points 2 & 4. Does your new version tell a different story about the evolutionary relationships between the taxa? Morphological Data Homologous structures are similarities due to shared ancestry, such as the bones of a whale’s flipper and a tiger’s front limb. Convergent evolution has taken place when two organisms developed similarities as they adapted to similar environmental challenges– not because they evolved from a common ancestor. Ex. The streamlined bodies of a tuna and a dolphin show convergent evolution. The likenesses that result from convergent evolution are considered analogous rather than homologous. Ex. The wings of a butterfly is analogous to the wing of a bat. Both are adaptations for flight. They do not indicate relatedness but rather similar solutions to similar problems. Molecular systematics uses DNA and other molecular data to determine evolutionary relationships. The more alike the DNA sequences of two organisms, the more closely related they are evolutionary. Cladogram A cladogram depicts patterns of shared characterists among taxa and forms the basis of a phylogenetic tree. A clade, within a tree, is defined as a group of species that includes an ancestral species and all its descendants. Clades are monophyletic. Shared derived characters are used to contrast cladograms. They are evolutionary novelties unique to a particular clade. A shared derived characteristic is one that originated in an ancestor of the taxon. Each cladogram is a hypothesis about the evolutionary relatedness of the organisms included. The goal of taxonomy is to understand the lines of descent from ancestral forms well enough to produce monophyletic cladograms. Cladograms reflect the common ancestor and all of its descendants. Genome The rate of evolution of DNA sequences varies from one part of the genome to another; therefore, comparing these different sequences helps us to investigate relationships between groups of organisms that diverges a long time ago. DNA that codes for ribosomal RNA changes relatively slowly and is useful for investigating relationships between taxa that diverged hundreds of millions of years ago. DNA that codes for mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) evolves rapidly and can be used to explore recent evolutionary events. Molecular clocks Molecular clocks are methods used to measure the absolute time of evolutionary change based on the observation that some genes and other regions of the genome appear to evolve at constant rates. The underlying assumption for molecular clocks is that the number of nucleotide substitutions in related genes is proportional to the time that has elapsed since the genes branches from their common ancestor. Taxonomy Three-domain system: Bacteria Archaea Eukarya The domain Bacteria and Archaea contain prokaryotic organisms, and Eukarya contains eukaryotic organisms. List three ways in which Bacteria and Archaea are similar. Bacteria and Archaea lack a nuclear membrane, have no membrane bound organelles, and have a circular chromosome. Archaea are more closely related to Eukarya than Bacteria. Provide evidence from the chart to justify this statement. Archaea and Eukarya have introns as apart of their gene complexes and have histones complexed with DNA to form a chromosome. Prokaryotes do not have these characterists.