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Modern Evolutionary Classification 18-2. Evolutionary Classification The strategy of grouping organisms together based on their evolutionary descent or Phylogeny.
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Evolutionary ClassificationThe strategy of grouping organisms together based on their evolutionary descent or Phylogeny. • A. Phylogeny – Scientist group organisms into categories that represent lines of evolutionary decent or evolutionary relationships among organisms, not just by physical similarities. • B. The higher the level of the taxon the further back in time the common ancestor would be in that taxon. • C. Animals that appear very similar may not share a recent common ancestor, at all. Example – Dolphin and Shark.
II. Classification Using Cladogram A. Derived Characters– Identifies and considers only those characteristics that appear in recent parts of a lineage not in older members. These are called Derived characters. 1. Cladogram – Uses Derived characters to construct a Cladogram diagram that shows evolutionary relationships among a group of organisms.
III. Similarities of DNA and RNA • A. The more similar the DNA sequence of two species , the more recently they shared a common ancestor and the more closely they are related in evolutionary terms.
VI. Molecular Clock • A. Uses DNA to estimate the length of time that 2 species have been evolving independently or have been separated. • B. The longer in time 2 species descended from a common ancestor, the more different their genes are likely to be.