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Ozzie Vilhelmsson

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Birds and crocodiles - more recent ancestor than crocs. and snakes/lizards. Crocs. evolved more slowly than birds since lineages separated ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ozzie Vilhelmsson


1
Ozzie Vilhelmsson Zoology Building, Room
213 Tel. (01224 27) 2867 Email
o.vilhelmsson_at_abdn.ac.uk
Estimating and using phylogenies
2
Taxonomy and Phylogeny
  • What fossils tell us
  • What living organisms tell us
  • Cladistics
  • Constructing phylogenies
  • Classification Evolutionary Relationships
  • Molecular Analyses - the way ahead!

3
Fossils
  • Incompleteness of fossil record
  • Fossilization an unlikely event
  • Only found in sedimentary rocks
  • Habitat bias
  • Age known
  • Intermediates observed
  • Can access extinct lines

4
PHYLOGENETIC TREES
  • Pedigree of a lineage
  • Evidence of dates of separation

(trees)
Time
Time
5
Tree construction
Gather data
  • Morphology
  • Development
  • Metabolic
  • Biochemical
  • Genetic
  • Anything, really

Similarity matrix (numerical taxonomy)
Tree
Simple, right?
6
But, ....
Turtle/birds/crocodile picture
... Different data can yield different trees!
7
CLADISTICS
  • Aims to distinguish reliable from unreliable
    characters
  • Homologies vs. Homoplasies
  • Derived vs. ancestral homologies

8
CLADISTICS
  • Method of determining evolutionary
    histories - displayed as trees
  • Clade entire portion of phylogeny from a
    common ancestor
    Monophyletic group
  • Cladogram unrooted evolutionary tree (no
    ancestors but points where lineages diverged)

9
HOMOLOGIES
  • A trait shared between species and inherited from
    their common ancestor homologous
  • Ancestral (general) homologies shared by all
    species in lineage - eg. vertebrae in vertebrates
  • Derived (special) homologies shared by few
    species in lineage - eg. indeterminate incisors
    in vertebrates

10
Why the fuss?
11
To reiterate
  • Derived homologous traits order TIME of
    separation
  • Ancestral homologous traits no use for this -all
    members of lineage have them

12
Identifying non-useful traits
  • Divergence traits unrecognizable
  • eg. plant leaves

13
(fig. 23.4 in textbook)
14
Identifying non-useful traits
  • Divergence traits unrecognizable
  • eg. plant leaves
  • Homoplasy trait evolves more than once
  • different structures resemble each other by
    convergent evolution eg. bat/bird/insect wings
  • Both cases analogous traits

15
Hennigs Method
  • Same trait in 2 species provisionally
    homologous ie. innocent, until proven guilty
  • Ancestral homology found in group and outside
    in species outgroup
  • Outgroup branched off from below base of
    lineage

16
What about wings?
Homoplaseous? Ancestral? Derived?
Fig. 23.2 in textbook
Homoplasy/homology depends on reference/outgroup
17
Rooting the tree
Having figured out which traits are important, we
can draw a cladogram. But, where does it root?
(Possible roots picture)
18
Distance
  • Simple principle How similar are the species?
    (similarity matrix/measurement)
  • Works well for simple molecular methods, such as
    DNADNA hybridization data
  • Molecular clock assumption

19
(Panda example)
20
PARSIMONY
  • Simple distance rooting assumes
  • trait evolution irreversible, ie. ancestral to
    derived
  • trait can change only once per lineage
    UNREALISTIC
  • But, cladogram requiring fewest reversals/changes
    most likely to be correct
  • PARSIMONY simplest is correct!

21
PARSIMONY
(counting changes picture)
22
Maximum likelihood
  • Requires a lot of data, massive computing power
  • Need model of evolutionary change to calculate
    probabilities
  • Probably the most widely used method today
    (sequence homologies, etc.)

23
Drawing a cladogram
  • 8 vertebrates
  • traits /-
  • hagfish outgroup
  • derived traits acquired since hagfish
  • cladistics minimizes branching - ie. assumes
    minimal homoplasy

24
Drawing a cladogram
25
A phylogenetic tree
Hagfish Perch Salamander Lizard Crocodile Pig
eon Mouse Chimpanzee
Jaws
26
Properties of cladogams
  • Temporal order of splits
  • Horizontal axis NOT correlated with similarity
  • 8 vertibrates cladogram perfect because traits
    arose not lost - BUT SNAKES???

27
Classification Evolutionary Relationships
  • Linnaeus - predated evolution as central concept
    of biology
  • but what features natural? important?
  • Modern taxonomists - classification reflects
    evolutionary relationships
  • BUT should classification reflect time or rate of
    evolution??

28
Defining clades
  • Monophyletic - share common ancestor
  • Polyphyletic - NO common ancestor
  • Paraphyletic - some, but not all, from common
    ancestor

29
(mon/para/polyphyletic picture similar to 23.12
in textbook)
30
The problem of paraphyly
  • Birds and crocodiles - more recent ancestor than
    crocs. and snakes/lizards
  • Crocs. evolved more slowly than birds since
    lineages separated
  • Birds as separate class recognizes their rapid
    evolution major unique derived traits

31
Systematicists
  • Still many polyphylectic groups
  • Detect convergent evol. change classification
  • BUT favour retaining paraphyletic groups to
    underscore rapid evolution
  • STABILITY of taxonomic system

32
Future of Systematics
  • Molecular genetics powerful computers
  • Fossil history - dating and derived vs ancestral
    traits
  • Molecular more traits than ever before
  • Combining two lines of evidence produces accurate
    dated phylogenies
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