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Reconstructing the History of Lineages Chapter 11 Tereza Jezkova School of Life Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas March 2011

Reconstructing the History of Lineages

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Reconstructing the History of Lineages. Chapter 11. Tereza Jezkova School of Life Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas March 2011. PHYLOGENETICS. study of evolutionary relatedness among organisms (through molecular data and morphological data). Cladograms. Sister taxa. taxon. O. E. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Chapter 11

Tereza JezkovaSchool of Life Sciences,

University of Nevada, Las Vegas

March 2011

Page 2: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

study of evolutionary relatedness among organisms (through molecular data and morphological data)

PHYLOGENETICS

Page 3: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Cladograms

ABCDEOtaxon

Common Ancestor

Sister taxa

Page 4: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

THE basic logic of phylogenetics:a natural taxon is a monophyletic group(all descendant taxa and their common ancestor)

ABCDEO

Common Ancestor

monophyletic

Common Ancestor

monophyletic

Fig. 11.4A

Page 5: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

THE basic logic of phylogenetic systematics:a natural taxon is a monophyletic group(all descendant taxa and their common ancestor)

ABCDEO

Fig. 11.4A

Page 6: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

ABCDEO

Other kinds of groups are not natural:paraphyletic groups (some, but not all

descendant taxa and their common ancestor)

Fig. 11.4B

Page 7: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Example of a paraphyletic group: Reptiles are paraphyletic if birds are removed

Page 8: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Other kinds of groups are not natural:polyphyletic groups (descendant taxa trace back

through two or more ancestors before reaching a common ancestor)

Fig. 11.4C

ABCDEO

Page 9: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Example of a polyphyletic group: warm-blooded animals (Mammals+Birds)

Page 10: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Characters (morphological, ecological, behavioral, molecular): traits that vary across taxa and clades

primitive character state

derived character state

character state change

Page 11: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

homologous characters (homology): characters whose traits are shared between two

or more taxa or clades because of inheritance from a common ancestor

Page 12: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

homologous characters (homology): characters whose traits are shared between two

or more taxa or clades because of inheritance from a common ancestor

pouch

pouchpouch

KOALA

POSSUM

Page 13: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

homoplasious characters (homoplasy): characters whose traits are shared between two

or more taxa but evolved independently

Page 14: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

homoplasious characters (homoplasy): characters whose traits are shared between two

or more taxa but evolved independently

FINS

FINS

FINSFINS

NOT USEFUL

Page 15: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

character state evolution

primitive character state

derived character state

character state change

Page 16: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

characters:

Primitive character state is not to have feathers

birds crocodiles

dinosaurs

feathersFeathers are derived character state for birds

Page 17: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

characters:

snakes lizards dinosaurs crocodiles

leglessness

Primitive character state is to have legs

Leglessness is a derived character state for snakes

Page 18: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

primitive vs. derived characters:unique derived (one clade)shared derived (two or more clades)

Page 19: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

primitive vs. derived characters:shared primitive

shared-primitive for this clade

Page 20: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

primitive vs. derived characters:

shared-primitive for this clade

shared-derived for this clade

Page 21: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

primitive vs. derived characters:shared primitive characters are not useful in

diagnosing a monophyletic group

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primitive vs. derived characters:Unique derived characters are not useful in

diagnosing a monophyletic group

Page 23: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

primitive vs. derived characters:Only shared derived characters can be used to

diagnose a monophyletic group.

Page 24: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

primitive vs. derived characters:Only shared derived characters can be used to

diagnose a monophyletic group.

Correct

Incorrect

Page 25: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Outgroupsused to polarize primitive derived direction

of character state changes in the ingroup

Fig. 11.5

ABCDEO

outgroup

Page 26: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Reconstructing trees1.Choose the taxa

ex: Vertebrates

Page 27: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Reconstructing trees2. Determine the characters

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Reconstructing trees3. Determine polarity of characters

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Reconstructing trees4. Group taxa by shared derived characters

Page 30: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Reconstructing trees5. Repeat with all characters

work out conflicts (none in this example)

Page 31: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Reconstructing trees6. Complete the tree

Page 32: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Reconstructing trees6. Use parsimony principle to choose the best tree

one change better (shorter tree) than two

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Outgroup Species A Species B

Species C Species D Species E

EXCERCISE

Page 34: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Data MatrixCharacter OG Sp A Sp B Sp C Sp D Sp E

Claws 0 1 1 1 0 1

Chin Hair 0 1 1 1 0 1

Horn 0 0 0 1 0 1

Tail 0 1 1 1 1 1

Spikes 0 0 0 1 0 0

Digits 0 0 0 1 0 0

Spots 0 0 0 0 1 0

Tympanum 1 0 0 1 1 1

Lateral Fold 0 1 1 0 1 1

Nostril 1 1 0 1 1 1

Page 35: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Data MatrixCharacter OG Sp A Sp B Sp C Sp D Sp E

Claws 0 1 1 1 0 1

Chin Hair 0 1 1 1 0 1

Horn 0 0 0 1 0 1

Tail 0 1 1 1 1 1

Spikes 0 0 0 1 0 0

Digits 0 0 0 1 0 0

Spots 0 0 0 0 1 0

Tympanum 1 0 0 1 1 1

Lateral Fold 0 1 1 0 1 1

Nostril 1 1 0 1 1 1

ABCE ABCE CEABCDE C C D AB ABDE

B

Page 36: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

Molecular phylogenetics

Page 37: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

EXCERCISE#Elephas_maximus_(Asian_elephant)AG-G--CT--TGA-AG--GA-AT-TC--T-TGAG-A-A-CAACAAAGCA--A-TCATTTGA-T-TTA---A-GT--AT-AGATGC-T-CAGTATA-AGA-AA-A-A-CA-AA-G-AGAGAC-ATTC-CATCC-C-A--A---TTCCT-T-TGA-ATGT--GTTTTATG-AG-TT-TAT-CAGTCAG-A-ACA--T—CA-T-AT--C-CTT--C-AACA--AGC-AT-TTTGA---GAAA-GGC-A-GAGACAA-T-G-CAT--TAGATT--TTCTT-A-C---CAAA-TCCTATG-A-T

Page 38: Reconstructing the History of Lineages

EXCERCISE