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Ozzie Vilhelmsson Zoology Building, Room 213 Tel.: (01224 27) 2867 Email: o.vilhelmsson@abdn.ac.uk. Estimating and using phylogenies. Taxonomy and Phylogeny. What fossils tell us What living organisms tell us Cladistics Constructing phylogenies
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Ozzie Vilhelmsson Zoology Building, Room 213 Tel.: (01224 27) 2867 Email: o.vilhelmsson@abdn.ac.uk Estimating and using phylogenies
Taxonomy and Phylogeny • What fossils tell us • What living organisms tell us • Cladistics • Constructing phylogenies • Classification & Evolutionary Relationships • Molecular Analyses - the way ahead!
Fossils • Incompleteness of fossil record • Fossilization an unlikely event • Only found in sedimentary rocks • Habitat bias • Age known • Intermediates observed • Can access extinct lines
PHYLOGENETIC TREES • Pedigree of a lineage • Evidence of dates of separation (trees) Time Time
Tree construction Gather data: • Morphology • Development • Metabolic • Biochemical • Genetic • Anything, really Similarity matrix (numerical taxonomy) Tree Simple, right?
But, .... Turtle/birds/crocodile picture ... Different data can yield different trees!
CLADISTICS • Aims to distinguish reliable from unreliable characters: • Homologies vs. Homoplasies • Derivedvs. ancestral homologies
CLADISTICS • Method of determining evolutionary histories - displayed as trees • Clade: entire portion of phylogeny from a common ancestor = Monophyletic group • Cladogram: unrooted evolutionary tree (no ancestors but points where lineages diverged)
HOMOLOGIES • A trait shared between species and inherited from their common ancestor = homologous • Ancestral (general) homologies:shared byall species in lineage - eg. vertebrae in vertebrates • Derived (special) homologies: shared by few species in lineage - eg. indeterminate incisors in vertebrates
Only this one is useful! Why the fuss?
To reiterate: • Derived homologous traits order TIME of separation • Ancestral homologous traits no use for this -all members of lineage have them
Identifying non-useful traits • Divergence = traits unrecognizable • eg. plant leaves
Identifying non-useful traits • Divergence = traits unrecognizable • eg. plant leaves • Homoplasy = trait evolves more than once • different structures resemble each other by convergent evolutioneg. bat/bird/insect wings • Both cases = analogous traits
Hennig’s Method • Same trait in 2 species = provisionally homologousie. innocent, until proven guilty • Ancestral homology = found in group and outside in species = outgroup • Outgroup = branched off from below base of lineage
What about wings? Homoplaseous? Ancestral? Derived? Fig. 23.2 in textbook Homoplasy/homology depends on reference/outgroup
Three methods: • Distance • Parsimony • Maximum likelihood Rooting the tree Having figured out which traits are important, we can draw a cladogram. But, where does it root? (Possible roots picture)
Distance • Simple principle: How similar are the species? (similarity matrix/measurement) • Works well for simple molecular methods, such as DNA:DNA hybridization data • “Molecular clock” assumption
PARSIMONY • Simple distance rooting assumes: • trait evolution irreversible, ie. ancestral to derived • trait can change only once per lineage UNREALISTIC • But, cladogram requiring fewest reversals/changes most likely to be correct • PARSIMONY = simplest is correct!
PARSIMONY (“counting changes” picture)
Maximum likelihood • Requires a lot of data, massive computing power • Need model of evolutionary change to calculate probabilities • Probably the most widely used method today (sequence homologies, etc.)
Drawing a cladogram • 8 vertebrates • traits +/- • hagfish = outgroup • derived traits = acquired since hagfish • cladistics minimizes branching - ie. assumes minimal homoplasy
Lungs Claws or nails Feathers Four-chambered heart Fur, mammary glands Relative evolutionary time Ancient events Recent events A phylogenetic tree Hagfish Perch Salamander Lizard Crocodile Pigeon Mouse Chimpanzee Jaws
Properties of cladogams • Temporal order of splits • Horizontal axis NOT correlated with similarity • 8 vertibrates cladogram = perfect because traits arose & not lost - BUT SNAKES???
Classification & Evolutionary Relationships • Linnaeus - predated evolution as central concept of biology • but what features natural? important? • Modern taxonomists - classification reflects evolutionary relationships • BUT should classification reflect time or rate of evolution??
Defining clades • Monophyletic - share common ancestor • Polyphyletic - NO common ancestor • Paraphyletic - some, but not all, from common ancestor
(mon/para/polyphyletic picture; similar to 23.12 in textbook)
The problem of paraphyly • Birds and crocodiles - more recent ancestor than crocs. and snakes/lizards • Crocs. evolved more slowly than birds since lineages separated • Birds as separate class recognizes their rapid evolution = major unique derived traits
Systematicists • Still many polyphylectic groups • Detect convergent evol. ==> change classification • BUT favour retaining paraphyletic groups to underscore rapid evolution • STABILITY of taxonomic system
Future of Systematics • Molecular genetics & powerful computers • Fossil history - dating and derived vs ancestral traits • Molecular = more traits than ever before • Combining two lines of evidence produces accurate dated phylogenies