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Warm-Up Contrast adaptive radiation vs. convergent evolution? Give an example of each. What is the correct sequence from the most comprehensive to least.

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Presentation on theme: "Warm-Up Contrast adaptive radiation vs. convergent evolution? Give an example of each. What is the correct sequence from the most comprehensive to least."— Presentation transcript:

1 Warm-Up Contrast adaptive radiation vs. convergent evolution? Give an example of each. What is the correct sequence from the most comprehensive to least comprehensive taxon? In a population of 500 rabbits, 320 are homozygous dominant for brown coat color (BB), 160 are heterozygous (Bb), and 20 are homozygous white (bb). What are the frequencies of the alleles (B and b)? What are the frequencies of the different genotypes (BB, Bb, and bb)?

2 Phylogeny and the Tree of Life
Chapter 26 Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

3 What you need to know: The taxonomic categories and how they indicate relatedness. How systematics is used to develop phylogenetic trees. The three domains of life including their similarities and their differences.

4 (evolutionary history)
Systematics: classifying organisms and determining their evolutionary relationships Taxonomy (classification) Systematics Phylogenetics (evolutionary history)

5 Tools used to determine evolutionary relationships: Fossils
Morphology (homologous structures) Molecular evidence (DNA, amino acids) Who is more closely related? Animals and fungi are more closely related than either is to plants.

6 Taxonomy: science of classifying and naming organisms
Binomial nomenclature (Genus species) Naming system developed by Carolus Linnaeus.

7 REMEMBER!! Dear King Philip Came Over For Good Spaghetti Dear King Philip Crossed Over Five Great Seas Dear King Philip Came Over From Germany Stoned Your own???

8 Phylogenetic Tree Branching diagram that shows evolutionary history of a group of organisms

9

10 Simple trees European wildcat Domestic cat South China Tiger
IMAGES FROM: Wikimedia Commons

11 Ancestor of domestic cat and wildcat
European wildcat Ancestor of all three cats Tiger

12 Human Gorilla Chimpanzee
IMAGES FROM: Wellcome Images / Wikimedia Commons

13 Extant species Hypothetical ancestors Human Chimpanzee Root (common ancestor) Outgroup Branch Gorilla

14 Cladogram Phylogram Branch length shows evolutionary change or time (or both) Branch length does not indicate evolutionary change or time

15 Rooted tree Unrooted tree Relationships and the order of events are shown Only relationships are shown

16 Three possible layouts
Circular (rooted) tree Unrooted tree Rooted tree

17 Constructing a phylogenetic tree
A 0 indicates a character is absent; a 1 indicates that a character is present.

18 Branch lengths can represent genetic change

19 Branch lengths can indicate time

20 Build your own tree

21 Living (extant) species
Common ancestor (fossil)

22 Extant species Common ancestor

23 Possible answers

24 Tree 1

25 Tree 2

26 Tree 3

27 Problems

28 Convergent evolution Vertebrate eye Octopus eye Nerve fibres Retina
Blind spot Optic nerve Optic nerve Vertebrate eye Octopus eye IMAGE FROM: Caerbannog. Wikimedia Commons

29 different trees are possible
Rhesus monkey Squid Bacterium Tiger Herring Snail Dog Octopus Baboon Coelacanth Fox Turbot Lemur Chimpanzee Oak tree Cat Redwood tree Gibbon Pine tree Human With 20 species 8, 200, 794, 532, 637, 891, 559, 375 different trees are possible Only one is right

30 Human Bacterium Coelacanth Cat Tiger Dog Fox Baboon Rhesus monkey Chimpanzee Gibbon Lemur Herring Turbot Snail Octopus Squid Redwood tree Pine tree Oak tree

31 Draw a phylogenetic tree based on the data below
Draw a phylogenetic tree based on the data below. Draw hatch marks on the tree to indicate the origin(s) of each of the 6 characters.

32 Answer:

33 Cladogram: diagram that depicts patterns of shared characteristics among taxa
Clade = group of species that includes an ancestral species + all descendents Shared derived characteristics are used to construct cladograms Turtle Leopard Hair Amniotic egg Four walking legs Hinged jaws Vertebral column Salamander Tuna Lamprey Lancelet (outgroup) Cladogram

34 Monophyletic, paraphyletic, and polyphyletic groups

35 Monophyletic A valid clade is monophyletic, signifying that it consists of the ancestor species and all its descendants

36 Paraphyletic A paraphyletic grouping consists of an ancestral species and some, but not all, of the descendants

37 Polyphyletic A polyphyletic grouping consists of various species that lack a common ancestor

38 Outgroups An outgroup is a species or group of species that is closely related to the ingroup, the various species being studied Systematists compare each ingroup species with the outgroup to differentiate between shared derived and shared primitive characteristics Outgroup comparison assumes that homologies shared by the outgroup and ingroup must be primitive characters that predate the divergence of both groups from a common ancestor It enables us to focus on characters derived at various branch points in the evolution of a clade

39 Practice Use the four cladograms below to answer the following questions: (5) a. Which cladograms have identical topologies (show the same pattern of relationships)? b. On tree 1, circle two different monophyletic groups. c. On tree 2, can you circle those same monophyletic groups. If so, do it! d. On tree 3 circle a paraphyletic group. E. On tree 4, which organisms are more closely related B and C or C and D. How can you tell?

40 More Practice Answer the questions associated with the following tree:
a. Circle the monophyletic group that includes Mimes & Carnies. b. Which group(s) are most closely related to Carnies? c. Are Clowns, Jugglers & Comedians a monophyletic group? If not, who else would need to be included? d. Who is more closely related to Jugglers: Mimes or Clowns, or are they equally related? e. What type of trait is “uses face paint” (e.g. shared ancestral, derived, etc.)?

41 Principle of maximum parsimony: use simplest explanation (fewest DNA changes) for tree – “keep it simple” Molecular clocks: some regions of DNA appear to evolve at constant rates Estimate date of past evolutionary events Eg. Origin of HIV infection in humans= 1930’s

42 Tree of Life 3 Domains: Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya

43 Identification of species
SYSTEMATICS focuses on phylogeny Biological diversity taxonomy cladistics classification Identification of species D K P C O F G S Homologous similarities fossils binomial molecular Genus, species morphology


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