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Phylogeny and Systematics (Part 6). Phylogeny and Systematics (Making “ Trees of Life ” ) AP Biology Ms. Day. Macroevolution. studies focus on change that occurs at or above the level of species The origin of taxonomic groups higher than species level How does this occur?
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Phylogeny and Systematics (Part 6) Phylogeny and Systematics (Making “Trees of Life”) AP Biology Ms. Day
Macroevolution • studies focus on change that occurs at or above the level of species • The origin of taxonomic groups higher than species level How does this occur? • Evolution of new traits (novelties) • mass extinctions • Open adaptive zones (divergent evolution)
Intro to Phylogenetics • https://highered.mheducation.com/sites/9834092339/student_view0/chapter23/animation_-_phylogenetic_trees.html
Phylogeny What is phylogeny? • The evolutionary history of a group of organisms • Systematicsattempts to reconstruct phylogeny, by analyzing evolutionary relatedness • Use morphological and biochemical similarities • Molecular systematics uses DNA, RNA and proteins to infer evolutionary relatedness. • Different tools are used to reconstruct phylogenies called phylogentic trees.
Making Evolutionary “Trees”: Illustrating Phylogeny 2 Methods • Cladistics = BRANCHES NOT TIME RELATED • sorts primitive and shared derived characteristics • based on evolutionary relationships • Makes cladograms
Cladograms have clades • Aclade within a cladogram • a group of species that includes an ancestral species and all its descendants • Cladistics • the study of resemblances among clades
Cladistics • Each branch is called a clade https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46L_2RI1k3k
WHY? WHY?
2. Phenetics = BRANCHES ARE TIME RELATED • based on overall similarity (morphology) without regard for evolutionary relationships • based on how similar organisms look • REMEMER: • Organisms can develop similar features through converent evolution **Creates phylograms
Leopard Domestic cat Common ancestor • Each branch point • Represents the divergence of two species
Wolf Leopard Domestic cat Common ancestor • “Deeper” branch points • Represent progressively greater amounts of divergence; more closely related
length of a branch reflects # of genetic changes that have taken place in a particular DNA sequence in that lineage More changes here
Currently, scientists use • Morphological (anatomy), biochemical, and molecular comparisons to show evolutionary relationships in “trees” • Obtained through fossil studies, DNA technology and current organisms
Not all Similarities Represent Common Ancestry • Homologous structures indicate shared common ancestry • Homologous structures are therefore evidence of divergent evolution • Analogous structures are similar in function but not in evolutionary history • Analogous structures are evidence of convergent evolution It is not always easy to sort homologous from analogous structures
https://ccl.northwestern.edu/simevolution/obonu/cladograms/Open-This-File.swfhttps://ccl.northwestern.edu/simevolution/obonu/cladograms/Open-This-File.swf • A shared primitive character • a homologous structure that is shared by all groups you are trying to define • A shared derived character • A new evolutionary trait unique to a particular clade(s)/branch
Outgroups vs. Ingroups • Outgroup • Species or group of species that is closely related to the ingroup • Distinguishes between shared primitive and shared derived characteristics • Closely related to ingroup • Ingroup • the various species we are studying
A Cladogram What is the shared primitive characteristic? Notochord
http://www.cengage.com/biology/discipline_content/animations/cladogram_construction.htmlhttp://www.cengage.com/biology/discipline_content/animations/cladogram_construction.html • http://www.wwnorton.com/college/biology/evolution/ch/04/animations.aspx
Phylograms and cladograms trees are JUST hypotheses • Which is the most parsimonious tree? • the best hypothesis which requires fewest evolutionary changes Parsimony does not always work, nature does not always take the simplest course