31
Systematics and the Phylogenetic Revolution Chapter 23

Systematics and the Phylogenetic Revolution Chapter 23

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Systematics and the Phylogenetic Revolution

Chapter 23

Introduction• All organisms:

– Are composed of one or more cells

– Carry out metabolism

– Transfer energy with ATP

– Encode hereditary information in DNA

• Tremendous diversity of life

– Bacteria-----whales----sequoia trees

• Biologists group organisms based on shared characteristics

Systematics

• Since fossil records are not complete, scientists rely on other types of evidence to establish the best hypothesis of evolutionary relationships

• Systematics: the study of evolutionary relationships

• Phylogeny: a hypothesis about patterns of relationship among species

• Darwin envisioned that all species were descended from a single common ancestor

• He depicted this history of life as a branching tree.

• Now called a cladogram

Systematics

• Twigs of a tree represent existing species

• Joining of twigs and branches reflects the pattern of common ancestry back in time to a single common ancestor

• Darwin called this process “descent with modification”

Systematics

Phylogenies depict evolutionary relationships

Systematics

• Key to interpreting a phylogeny: look at how recently species share a common ancestor

• Similarity may not accurately predict evolutionary relationships

– Early systematists relied on the expectation that the greater the time since two species diverged from a common ancestor, more different would be

Systematics

• Evolution can occur rapidly at one time and slowly at another (punctuated and gradual evolution)

Systematics

• Oscillating selection: Traits can evolve in one direction, then back the other way

• Evolution is not always divergent: convergent evolution– Use similar habitats– Similar environmental pressures

• Evolutionary reversal: process in which a species re-evolves the characteristics of an ancestral species

Systematics

Cladistics• Derived characteristic: similarity that is

inherited from the most recent common ancestor of an entire group, apomorphy

• Ancestral: similarity that arose from common ancestor, plesiomorphy

• In cladistics, only shared derived characters are considered informative about evolutionary relationships

• To use the cladistic method character variation must be identified as ancestral or derived

• Characters can be any aspect of the phenotype– Morphology - Physiology– Behavior - DNA

• Characters should exist in recognizable character states– Example: Teeth in amniote vertebrates

has two states, present in most mammals and reptiles and absence in birds and turtles

Cladistics

Examples of ancestral versus derived characters

• Presence of hair is a shared derived feature of mammals

• Presence of lungs in mammals is an ancestral feature; also present in amphibians and reptiles

Cladistics

• Determination of ancestral versus derived

– First step in a manual cladistic analysis is to polarize the characters (are they ancestral or derived)

• Example: polarize “teeth” means to determine presence or absence in the most recent common ancestor

Cladistics

– Outgroup comparison is used to assign character polarity

• A species or group of species not a member of the group under study is designated as the outgroup

– Outgroup species do not always exhibit the ancestral condition

Cladistics

• When the group under study exhibits multiple character states, and one of those states is exhibited by the outgroup, then that state is ancestral and other states are derived

• Most reliable if character state is exhibited by several different outgroups

Cladistics

• Following the character state-outgroup method

– Presence of teeth in mammals and reptiles is ancestral

– Absence of teeth in birds and turtles is derived

Cladistics

Construction of a cladogram

• Polarize characteristics

• Clade: species that share a common ancestor as indicated by the possession of shared derived characters

• Clades are evolutionary units and refer to a common ancestor and all descendants

• Synapomorphy: a derived character shared by clade members

Cladistics

• A simple cladogram is a nested set of clades

• Plesiomorphies: ancestral states

• Symplesiomorphies: shared ancestral states

Cladistics

Cladistics

• Homoplasy: a shared character state that has not been inherited from a common ancestor

– Results from convergent evolution

– Results from evolutionary reversal

• If there are conflicts among characters, use the principle of parsimony which favors the hypothesis that requires the fewest assumptions

Cladistics

Parsimony and Homoplasy

Cladistics

A Cladogram; DNA

Cladistics

A Cladogram: DNA

Cladistics

Other Phylogenetic Methods

• Some characters evolve rapidly and principle of parsimony may be misleading

• Rate at which some parts of the DNA genome evolve– Mutations in repetition sequences, not

deleted by natural selection• Statistical approaches• Molecular clock: rate of evolution of a

molecule is constant through time

Systematics and Classification

• Classification: how we place species and higher groups into the taxonomic hierarchy

– Genus, family, class..

• Monophyletic group: includes the most recent common ancestor of the group and all of its descendants (clade)

• Paraphyletic group: includes the most recent common ancestor of the group, but not all its descendants

• Polyphyletic group: does not include the most recent common ancestor of all members of the group

• Taxonomic hierarchies are based on shared traits, should reflect evolutionary relationships

• Why should you refer to birds as a type of dinosaur?

Systematics and Classification

Monophyletic Group

Systematics and Classification

Paraphyletic Group

Systematics and Classification

Polyphyletic Group

Systematics and Classification

• Phylogenetic species concept (PSC)– Focuses on shared derived characters

• Biological species concept (BSC) – Defines species as groups of

interbreeding population that are reproductively isolated

• Phylogenetic species concept: species should be applied to groups of populations that have been evolving independently of other groups

Systematics and Classification