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BIO2093 – Phylogenetics Darren Soanes Phylogeny I.

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Presentation on theme: "BIO2093 – Phylogenetics Darren Soanes Phylogeny I."— Presentation transcript:

1 BIO2093 – Phylogenetics Darren Soanes Phylogeny I

2 Phylogenetics The study of evolutionary relationships among groups of organisms. Phylogenetic tree: a hypothesis of the order in which evolutionary events are assumed to have occurred.

3 Phylogenetic tree

4 Parts of a tree plural of taxon = taxa

5 Phylogenetic tree: evolutionary family tree Nodes in the tree represent speciation events, where an ancestral lineage gives rise to daughter lineages.

6 Relationships in trees

7 Rooting a tree outgroup Root - most recent common ancestor of all the taxa in a tree outgroup — a taxon outside the group of interest. All the members of the group of interest are more closely related to each other than they are to the outgroup. Used to root the tree.

8 Outgroup

9 Rooted and unrooted trees rooted tree unrooted tree

10 Types of trees A cladogram is a phylogenetic tree formed using cladistic methods. It shows branching pattern only. A phylogram is a phylogenetic tree that has branch lengths proportional to the amount of character change. A chronogram is a phylogenetic tree that explicitly represents evolutionary time through its branch lengths.

11 Cladistics Classification into clades based on shared derived characters (synapomorphies). A synapomorphy is a trait shared among species because the common ancestor of those species also had the trait.

12

13 Analogy

14 Homoplasy: homoplastic character state is a trait that is shared by two or more taxa because of convergence, parallelism or reversal e.g modified nostrils on top of head in cetaceans and dinosaur group Macronaria.

15 Convergent evolution

16 Plant kingdom

17 Clades A clade consists of an ancestor organism and all its descendants. Clade = monophyletic group Each monophyletic group can be identified by one or more synapomorphies.

18 Phylogenetic classification system Phylogenetic groups are based on clades (monophyletic groups)

19 Phylogenetic classification system Reptile is not a legitimate phylogenetic grouping (unless we include birds as reptiles) – paraphyletic group Birds are part of the clade Dinosauria.

20 Phylogenetic classification system

21 Mono, poly and paraphyly

22 Polyphyletic group – ‘warm blooded’

23 Types of trees A cladogram is a phylogenetic tree formed using cladistic methods. It shows branching pattern only. A phylogram is a phylogenetic tree that has branch lengths proportional to the amount of character change. A chronogram is a phylogenetic tree that explicitly represents evolutionary time through its branch lengths.

24 Phylogram

25 Cladogram Phylogram

26 Types of trees A cladogram is a phylogenetic tree formed using cladistic methods. It shows branching pattern only. A phylogram is a phylogenetic tree that has branch lengths proportional to the amount of character change. A chronogram is a phylogenetic tree that explicitly represents evolutionary time through its branch lengths.

27 Chronogram Phylogram calibrated based on fossil record

28 Constructing phylogenetic trees

29 From studying fossils and lineages closely related to the vertebrate clade, we hypothesise that the ancestor of vertebrates had none of these features

30 Constructing phylogenetic trees

31

32 Parsimony All other things being equal, the best hypothesis is the one that requires the fewest evolutionary changes

33 Reading Freeman and Herron – Evolutionary Analysis (4 th Edition): Chapter 4 (Estimating Evolutionary Trees).

34 Summary Phylogenetic tree: a hypothesis of the order in which evolutionary events are assumed to have occurred. Constructed using shared derived characters (synapomorphies). Parsimony: All other things being equal, the best hypothesis is the one that requires the fewest evolutionary changes.


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