Transcript Chapter 10
Phylogeny and
Systematics
Chapter 10
Taxonomy
Taxonomy produces
a formal system for
naming and
classifying species to
illustrate their
evolutionary
relationship.
Taxonomy & Systematics
Taxonomy
Formal system for naming and classifying species.
Systematics
Broader science of classifying organisms based on
similarity, biogeography, etc.
Systematic zoologists have three goals:
To discover all species of animals.
To reconstruct their evolutionary relationships.
To classify animals according to their evolutionary
relationships.
Taxonomy
Introduction of evolutionary theory into animal
taxonomy changed taxonomist’s role from one
of classification to systematization.
Classification denotes the construction of
classes.
Grouping of organisms that possess a common feature
called an essence used to define the class.
Taxonomy
Systematization places groups of species into
units of common evolutionary descent.
Character variation is used to diagnose systems of
common descent.
No requirement that an essential character be
maintained throughout the system for its
recognition as a taxon.
Taxonomy
In classification
Taxonomist asks whether a species being classified
contains the defining feature of a particular taxonomic
class.
In systematization
Taxonomist asks whether the characteristics of a species
confirm or reject the hypothesis that it descends from the
most recent common ancestor of a particular taxon.
Linnaeus and Classification
Carolus Linnaeus designed our hierarchical
classification scheme.
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
Linnaeus and Classification
All animals are placed in Kingdom Animalia.
Names of animal groups at each rank in the
hierarchy are called taxa (taxon).
Each rank can be subdivided into additional levels of
taxa.
Superclass, suborder, etc.
Linnaeus and Classification
Linnaeus and Classification
Binomial nomenclature is the system
Linnaeus used for naming species.
Genus and species
Names are latinized and italicized, only the genus is
capatilized.
Sitta carolinensis
Linnaeus and Classification
A trinomial name
includes a
subspecies epithet.
Ensatina escholtzii
escholtzii
E. e. klauberi
Species
Defining a species can be difficult.
Criteria:
Common descent
The smallest distinct groupings of organisms sharing a
pattern of descent.
Morphological & molecular techniques
Members of a species must form a reproductive
community that excludes other species.
Species
The geographic range of a species is its distribution in
space.
Evolutionary duration of a species is its distribution in
time.
A worldwide species is cosmopolitan.
One with a very localized range is called endemic.
Typological Species Concept
The typological or
morphological species
concept relies on type
specimens that represent
the ideal form for the
species. When trying to
name a specimen, the type
specimens were compared.
Scientists still name species by
designating a type specimen.
The Biological Species
Concept
The biological species concept emerged
during the evolutionary synthesis.
“A species is a reproductive community of
populations (reproductively isolated from others) that
occupies a specific niche in nature.” Mayr 1982
Sibling species fit this category, but can only be
differentiated with molecular techniques.
Lacks a temporal dimension.
Degree of reproductive isolation necessary?
Species that reproduce asexually?
Evolutionary Species Concept
The evolutionary species concept states that
a single lineage of ancestor-descendant
populations that maintains its identity from
other such lineages and that has its own
evolutionary tendencies and historical fate.
Definition accommodates both sexual and asexual
forms as well as fossils.
Phylogenetic Species
Concept
The phylogenetic species concept is defined
as an irreducible (basal) grouping of organisms
diagnosably distinct from other such groupings
and within which there is a parental pattern of
ancestry and descent.
Both asexual and sexual groups are covered.
Phylogenetic Species
Concept
Main difference in practice between the
evolutionary and phylogenetic species
concepts:
The latter emphasizes recognizing as separate species
the smallest groupings of organisms that have undergone
independent evolutionary change.
Discerns the greatest number of species but may be
impractical.
Disregards details of evolutionary process.
Investigating the Tree of Life
A major goal of systematics is to infer the evolutionary
tree or phylogeny – the evolutionary history of a
species or group of related species.
Phylogeny
Phylogenies are inferred by identifying organismal
features, characters, that vary among species.
Morphological
Chromosomal
Molecular
Behavioral or ecological
Phylogeny
Shared characters that result from common ancestry
are homologous.
Sorting Homology from
Analogy
A potential misconception in constructing a phylogeny
is similarity due to convergent evolution, called
analogy, rather than shared ancestry.
Sorting Homology from
Analogy
Convergent evolution
occurs when similar
environmental
pressures and natural
selection produce
similar (analogous)
adaptations in
organisms from
different evolutionary
lineages.
Shared Primitive and Shared Derived
Characteristics
A shared primitive (ancestral) character:
Is a homologous structure that predates the branching of
a particular clade from other members of that clade.
Is shared beyond the taxon we are trying to define.
Example – mammals all have a backbone, but so do
other vertebrates.
Shared Primitive and Shared Derived
Characteristics
A shared derived character is an evolutionary novelty
unique to a particular clade.
All mammals have hair, and no other animals have hair.
Phylogeny
The form of the character that was present in the
common ancestor of the entire group is called
ancestral.
Variant forms of the character arose later and are
called derived character states.
Determining polarity of a character involves
determining which state is ancestral.
Phylogeny
Polarity is determined by using outgroup comparison.
An outgroup is closely related, but not part of the group
being examined (the ingroup).
If a character is found in both the study group and the
outgroup, it is considered ancestral for the study group.
Character groups found in the study groups but not the
outgroups are derived.
Phylogeny
Clades are organisms or species that share derived
character states and form a subset within a larger
group.
A synapomorphy is a derived character shared by the
members of the clade.
A clade corresponds to a unit of evolutionary common
descent.
A nested hierarchy is formed by the derived states of all
characters in a study group.
Phylogeny
Ancestral character states for a taxon are called
plesiomorphic.
Sharing these ancestral characters is called
symplesiomorphy.
Symplesiomorphies, unlike synapomorphies, do not
provide information on nesting of clades – groups with
derived characters get left out.
Phylogeny
The nested hierarchy of clades can be
represented as a cladogram that is based
on shared synapomorphies.
Phylogeny
A phylogenetic tree is
another way of representing
evolutionary relationships.
Branches represent real
lineages that occurred in the
evolutionary past.
Includes information about
ancestors, duration of
evolutionary lineages,
amounts of evolutionary
change that has occurred.
Sources of Phylogenetic Information
Characters used to construct cladograms can
be found using:
Comparative morphology – examine shapes and
sizes of organismal structures, including
developmental origins.
Comparative biochemistry – examine sequences
of amino acids and nucleotides to identify variable
characters.
Comparative cytology – uses variation in
numbers, shapes, and sizes of chromosomes and
their parts.
Taxonomy
A theory of taxonomy allows us to rank taxonomic
groups.
Two popular theories
Evolutionary taxonomy
Phylogenetic systematics
Both based on evolutionary principles, sometimes
results conflict.
Cladistics
A valid clade is
monophyletic.
Signifying that it
consists of the
ancestor species
and all its
descendants.
Cladistics
A paraphyletic
clade is a grouping
that consists of an
ancestral species
and some, but not
all, of the
descendants.
Cladistics
A polyphyletic
grouping includes
numerous types of
organisms that lack
a common ancestor.
Traditional Evolutionary Taxonomy
Evolutionary taxonomy utilizes common
descent and the amount of adaptive
evolutionary change to rank higher taxa.
Sometimes this type of classification includes
paraphyletic groupings.
Phylogenetic Systematics
Phylogenetic systematics, or cladistics,
emphasizes common descent and is based on
cladograms.
All taxa must be monophyletic.
Cladistic taxonomists have moved chimpanzees,
gorillas, and orangutans into the family Hominidae
with humans.
Humans and chimps form a sister group, as do the
human/chimp group and gorillas.
Theories of Taxonomy
Both evolutionary and cladistic taxonomy:
Accept monophyletic groups.
Reject polyphyletic groups.
Differ on accepting paraphyletic groups.
Traditional evolutionary taxonomy does.
Phylogenetic systematics does not.
Difference has important evolutionary implications.
The terms “primitive,” “advanced,” “specialized” and
“generalized” are used for specific characteristics and not for
groups as a whole.
Maximum Parsimony and Maximum
Likelihood
Systematists can never be sure of finding the single
best tree in a large data set.
Narrow the possibilities by applying the principles of
maximum parsimony and maximum likelihood.
Parsimony
Among phylogenetic hypotheses the most
parsimonious tree is the one that requires the fewest
evolutionary events to have occurred in the form of
shared derived characters.
Occam’s Razor
Parsimony
The principle of
maximum
likelihood states
that, given certain
rules about how DNA
changes over time, a
tree can be found
that reflects the most
likely sequence of
evolutionary events.
Phylogenetic Trees as Hypotheses
The best hypotheses for phylogenetic trees are those
that fit the most data: morphological, molecular, and
fossil.
Molecular Systematics
Much of an organism’s evolutionary history is
documented in its genome.
Comparing nucleic acids or other molecules to infer
relatedness is a valuable tool for tracing organisms’
evolutionary history.
Major Divisions of Life
Aristotle’s two kingdom system included plants
and animals.
One-celled organisms became a problem
Haeckel (1866) proposed Protista for singlecelled organisms.
R.H. Whittaker (1969) proposed a five-kingdom
system to distinguish prokaryotes and fungi.
Major Divisions of
Life
Woese, Kandler and Wheelis
(1990) proposed three
monophyletic domains above
kingdom level—Eucarya,
Bacteria and Archaea—based
on ribosomal RNA sequences.
Major Divisions of Life
More revisions are necessary to clarify
taxonomic kingdoms based on monophyly.
“Protozoa”
Neither animals nor a valid monophyletic taxon.
“Protista”
Not a monophyletic kingdom.
Most likely composed of seven or more kingdoms.
Major Subdivisions of the Animal
Kingdom
Traditional groupings based on
embryological and anatomical characters:
Branch A (Mesozoa): phylum Mesozoa,
the mesozoa
Branch B (Parazoa): phylum Porifera,
the sponges and
phylum Placozoa
Branch C (Eumetazoa): all other phyla
Major Subdivisions of the Animal
Kingdom
Branch C (Eumetazoa): all other phyla
Grade I (Radiata): phyla Cnidaria, Ctenophora
Grade II (Bilateria): all other phyla
Division A (Protostomia): Protostome characteristics
Acoelomates: phyla Platyhelminthes,
Gnathostomulida, Nemertea
Pseudocoelomates: phyla Rotifera, Gastrotricha,
Kinorhyncha, Nematoda, Nematomorpha,
Acanthocephala, Entoprocta, Priapulida, Loricifera
Eucoelomates: phyla Mollusca, Annelida,
Arthropoda, Echiurida, Sipunculida, Tardigrada,
Onychophora.
Major Subdivisions of the Animal
Kingdom
Division B (Deuterostomia): Deuterostome
characteristics
phyla Phoronida, Ectoprocta, Chaetognatha,
Brachiopoda, Echinodermata, Hemichordata,
Chordata
Major Subdivisions of the Animal
Kingdom
Recent molecular phylogenetic studies have challenged
traditional classification of Bilateria.
Grade II: Bilateria
Division A: (Protostomia):
Lophotrochozoa: phyla platyhelminthes, Nemertea,
Rotifera, Gastrotricha, Acanthocephala, Mollusca,
Annelida, Echiurida, Sipunculida, Phoronida, Ectoprocta,
Entoprocta, Gnathostomulida, Chaetognatha, Brachiopoda
Ecdysozoa: phyla Kinorhyncha, Nematoda,
Nematomorpha, Priapulida, Arthropoda, Tardigrada,
Onychophora, Loricifera
Division B (Deuterostomia):
phyla Chordata, Hemichordata, Echinodermata