2. Key terms
The great battle for life
Roots of classification
Phylogenetic branches
3. We will become acquainted with some of
the methods by which we can infer
phylogenetic relationships and we will
see how our understanding of those
relationships is reflected in the
classification of organisms.
4. is a method of taxonomy used to group and
categorize organisms into groups such as
genus or species.
it took on an entirely different significance
(compared with 17-18’s) after The Origin of
Species was published in 1859.
5. is the study of evolutionary relation among
groups of organisms, which is discovered
through molecular sequencing data and
morphological data matrices.
6. “ All species, extant and extinct
form a great “Tree of Life” or
phylogenetic tree.
It is the great battle for life”
7. Phylogenetic analysis is the study of
relationships among species
Carolus Linnaeus and
BINOMAL NOMENCLATURE
8.
9. external and internal morphological
features
differences in behaviour, cell
structure, biochemistry and chromosome
structure.
DNA sequences
10.
11. Persimony holds that the best
phylogenetic hypothesis is the one
that requires us to postulate the
fewest homoplasious changes.
12.
13.
14. The chief way of confirming a phylogenetic
hypothesis is to see if it agrees with
independent data
15. Sites
123 456 789 10 11 12 13 14 15
Haplotype
3 ATA CTA TAT GTT GCC
2 ATA CTA CAT GTT GCC
1 ATA CTA CAC GTT GCC
4 ATA CTA CAC GTT ACC
5 ATA CTA CAC GTT ACT
6 ATA CTG CAC GTT ACT
7 ATG CTG CAC GTT ACT
19. A phylogeny is the history by which species or other taxa
have successively originated from common ancestors.
A phylogenetic tree is a statement about evolutionary
relationships and like all scientific statements it is a
hypothesis
Phylogenetic trees, estimated from the characteristics of
the taxa, represent evolutionary relationships and provide a
framework for analyzing many aspects of evolution.
Both morphological and molecular data are used in
phylogenetic analysis.
20. “Evolution”, Douglas J. Futuyma, 2005
http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/phylo
genetics_01
http://www.ebi.ac.uk/pdbsum/