Title: Phylogenetic Trees I
1Phylogenetic Trees - I
2Phylogenetic Tree
- - phylogenetic relationships are normally
displayed in a tree-like diagram (phylogenetic
tree/cladogram) - a cladogram is a branching diagram describing
the phylogenetic relationships of the taxa under
investigation. - a phylogenetic tree graphically represents a
hypothetical evolutionary process. - phylogenetic trees are subjected to revision as
additional data becomes available. - evolutionary tree is used synonymously as
phylogenetic tree.
3Phylogenetic Tree
- a cladogram consists of two major elements
nodes and branches. - a node represents a taxon
a branch represents evolutionary event(s). - the
branching pattern of a cladogram is called the
topology.
4Phylogenetic Trees
Cladogram
5Clade
- a clade is an ancestor species with all its
descendants. - a monophyletic group is a clade.
- There are three ways to define a clade for use
in a cladistic taxonomy - i) Node based
- ii) Stem based
- iii) Apomorphy based
6Clade
Node-based the most recent common ancestor of A
and B along with all of its descendants
Stem-based all descendants of the oldest common
ancestor of A and B that is not also an ancestor
of Z Apomorphy-based the most recent common
ancestor of A and B, along with all of its
descendants, possessing a certain derived
character. This definition is generally
discouraged by most cladists
7Cladogram / Phylogram / Phenogram
- A cladogram/phylogram displays branching
information to explain the evolutionary
relationships. - A phylogram has additional
information the length of branches according to
the amount of changes (evolutionary process).
8Cladogram / Phylogram
Cladogram
Phylogram
9Cladogram / Phylogram / Phenogram
- A phenogram is generated from phenetic analysis
(numerical taxonomy). It does not necessary
explain the ancestor-descendant relationships of
the taxa in the investigation.
10Gene trees and species trees
A
a
Species tree
Gene tree
B
b
C
c
We often assume that gene trees give us species
trees
11Characters and Character States
- Organisms comprise sets of features
- When organisms/taxa differ with respect to a
feature (e.g. its presence or absence or
different nucleotide bases at specific sites in a
sequence) the different conditions are called
character states - The collection of character states with respect
to a feature constitute a character
12Homoplasy
- Homoplasy is similarity that is not homologous
(not due to common ancestry) - It is the result of independent evolution
(convergence, parallelism, reversal) - Homoplasy can provide misleading evidence of
phylogenetic relationships (if mistakenly
interpreted as homology) - homoplasy can be common in DNA data
- There are a limited number of alternative
character states (e.g. Only A, G, C and T in
DNA) - Rates of evolution are sometimes high