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Lumpers. Splitters. Shifting Kingdoms. Multicellular Animals. Archezoans. Euglenoids. Slime Molds. Archaebacteria. Brown Algae. Protozoans. Chrysophytes. Red algae. Green Algae. Bryophytes. Myxozoans. True Fungi. Tracheophytes. Bacteria. 8. 5. 3. 2. 1. Extant.
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Lumpers Splitters Shifting Kingdoms
Multicellular Animals Archezoans Euglenoids Slime Molds Archaebacteria Brown Algae Protozoans Chrysophytes Red algae Green Algae Bryophytes Myxozoans True Fungi Tracheophytes Bacteria 8 5 3 2 1 Extant How Many Kingdoms? Extinct Long Time with Prokaryotes only Original Cell
Multicellular Animals Archezoans Euglenoids Slime Molds Archaebacteria Brown Algae Protozoans Chrysophytes Red algae Green Algae Bryophytes Myxozoans True Fungi Tracheophytes Bacteria 0.5 1 2 3 4 BYBP Extant How Long Ago? Land! Plants Multicellular First Eukaryotes Extinct Cyanobacterial Oxygen Long Time with Prokaryotes only Origin of Life Original Cell
Evidence Categories • History - clearer recently, more obscure anciently • Fossils - stratigraphic depth, isotope decay, etc. • Chemical - metabolic products such as O2, Ss • Molecular - DNA sequence alterations, etc. • Developmental sequences - onto- phylo- geny • Biogeography - Pangea, Gondwana & Laurasia
How do we know the Evolution Pathway? Phylogenetic Systematics • Inferences from comparison of extant organisms • Characters-Attributes of the organism • Anatomy • Morphology • Development • Physiology • Macromolecule Sequences • Polarizing Character States • Plesiomorphies-Ancient, shared by descendants • Apomorphies-More-recent derivatives • Synapomorphy-Shared among related organisms • Autapomorphy-Found only in one organism • Use of outgroup to compare to ingroup