BSC 1011C
General Biology II
Dr. Graeme Lindbeck
glindbeck@valenciacollege.edu


Phylogeny and Systematics

Outline

A. The Fossil Record and Geological Time

  1. Sedimentary rocks are the richest source of fossils
  2. Paleontologists use a variety of methods to date fossils
  3. The fossil record is a substantial, but incomplete, chronicle of evolutionary history
  4. Phylogeny has a biogeographical basis in continental drift
  5. The history of life is punctuated by mass extinctions

B. Systematics: Connecting Classification to Phylogeny

  1. Taxonomy employs a hierarchical system of classification
  2. Modern phylogenetic systematics is based on cladistic analysis
  3. Systematists can infer phylogeny from molecular evidence
  4. The principle of parsimony helps systematists reconstruct phylogeny
  5. Phylogenetic trees are hypotheses
  6. Molecular clocks may keep track of evolutionary time
  7. Modern systematics is flourishing with lively debate

A. The Fossil Record and Geological Time

Introduction

Evolutionary biology is about both processes (e.g., natural selection and speciation) and history.

A major goal of evolutionary biology is to reconstruct the history of life on earth.

Systematics is the study of biological diversity in an evolutionary context.

Part of the scope of systematics is the development of phylogeny, the evolutionary history of a species or group of related species.

Fossils are the preserved remnants or impressions left by organisms that lived in the past.

The fossil record is the ordered array in which fossils appear within sedimentary rocks.

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1. Sedimentary rocks are the richest source of fossils

Sedimentary rocks form from layers of sand and silt that settle to the bottom of seas and swamps.

The organic material in a dead organism usually decays rapidly, but hard parts that are rich in minerals (such as bones, teeth, shells) may remain as fossils.

Under the right conditions minerals dissolved in groundwater seep into the tissues of dead organisms, replace its organic material, and create a cast in the shape of the organism.

Rarer than mineralized fossils are those that retain organic material.

These are sometimes discovered as thin films between layers of sandstone or shale.

Trace fossils consist of footprints, burrows, or other impressions left in sediments by the activities of animals.

These rocks are in essence fossilized behavior.

If an organism dies in a place where decomposition cannot occur, then the entire body, including soft parts may be preserved as a fossil.

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2. Paleontologists use a variety of methods to date fossils

When a dead organism is trapped in sediment, this fossil is frozen in time relative to other strata in a local sample.

The strata at one location can be correlated in time to those at another through index fossils.

By comparing different sites, geologists have established a geologic time scale with a consistent sequence of historical periods.

Boundaries between geologic eras and periods correspond to times of great change, especially mass extinctions, not to periods of similar length.

The serial record of fossils in rocks provides relative ages, but not absolute ages, the actual time when the organism died.

Radiometric dating is the method used most often to determine absolute ages for fossils.

For example, the radioactive isotope, carbon-14, is present in living organisms in the same proportion as it occurs in the atmosphere.

Over time, radioactive "parent" isotopes are converted at a steady decay rate to "daughter" isotopes.

The rate of conversion is indicated as the half-life, the time it takes for 50% of the isotope to decay.

While carbon-14 is useful for dating relatively young fossils, radioactive isotopes of other elements with longer half lives are used to date older fossils.

Paleontologists can also use the ratio of two isomers of amino acids, the left-handed (L) and right-handed (D) forms, in proteins.

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3. The fossil record is a substantial, but incomplete, chronicle of evolutionary history

The discovery of a fossil depends on a sequence of improbable events.

A substantial fraction of species that have lived probably left no fossils, most fossils that formed have been destroyed, and only a fraction of existing fossils have been discovered.

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4. Phylogeny has a biogeographical basis in continental drift

The history of Earth helps explain the current geographical distribution of species.

The continents drift about Earth's surface on plates of crust floating on the hot mantle.

About 250 million years ago, all the land masses were joined into one supercontinent, Pangaea, with dramatic impacts on life on land and the sea.

A second major shock to life on Earth was initiated about 180 million years ago, as Pangaea began to break up into separate continents.

Each became a separate evolutionary arena and organisms in different biogeographic realms diverged.

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5. The history of life is punctuated by mass extinction

The fossil record reveals long quiescent periods punctuated by brief intervals when the turnover of species was much more extensive.

These brief periods of mass extinction were followed by extensive diversification of some of the groups that escaped extinction.

A species may become extinct because:

Extinction is inevitable in a changing world.

During crises in the history of life, global conditions have changed so rapidly and disruptively that a majority of species have been swept away.

The fossil record records five to seven severe mass extinctions.

The Permian mass extinction (250 million years ago) claimed about 90% of all marine species.

Impacting land organisms as well, 8 out of 27 orders of Permian insects did not survive into the next geological period.

This mass extinction occurred in less than five million years, an instant in geological time.

Factors that may have caused the Permian mass extinction include:

The Cretaceous mass extinction (65 million years ago) doomed half of the marine species and many families of terrestrial plants and animals, including nearly all the dinosaur lineages.

Hypotheses for the mechanism for this event include:

Walter and Luis Alvarez proposed that the impact of an asteroid would produce a great cloud that would have blocked sunlight and severely disturbed the climate for several months.

Critical evaluation of the impact hypothesis as the cause of the Cretaceous extinctions is ongoing.

Although the debate over the impact hypothesis has muted somewhat, researchers maintain a healthy skepticism about the link between the Chicxulub impact event and the Cretaceous extinctions.

While the emphasis of mass extinctions is on the loss of species, there are tremendous opportunities for those that survive.

After a mass extinction, the survivors become the stock for new radiations to fill the many biological roles vacated or created by the extinctions.

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B. Systematics: Connecting Classification to Phylogeny

To trace phylogeny or the evolutionary history of life, biologists use evidence from paleontology, molecular data, comparative anatomy, and other approaches.

1. Taxonomy employs a hierarchical system of classification

The Linnean system, first formally proposed by Linneaus in Systema naturae in the 18th century, has two main characteristics.

Under the binomial system, each species is assigned a two-part latinized name, a binomial.

A hierachical classification will group species into broader taxonomic categories.

Species that appear to be closely related are grouped into the same genus.

Genera are grouped into progressively broader categories: family, order, class, phylum, kingdom and domain.

Each taxonomic level is more comprehensive than the previous one.

The named taxonomic unit at any level is called a taxon.

Phylogenetic trees reflect the hierarchical classification of taxonomic groups nested within more inclusive groups.

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2. Modern phylogenetic systematics is based on cladistic analysis

A phylogeny is determined by a variety of evidence including fossils, molecular data, anatomy, and other features.

Most systematists use cladistic analysis, developed by a German entomologist Willi Hennig to analyze the data

A phylogenetic diagram or cladogram is constructed from a series of dichotomies.

These dichotomous branching diagrams can include more taxa.

The sequence of branching symbolizes historical chronology.

Each branch or clade can be nested within larger clades.

A clade consists of an ancestral species and all its descendents, a monophyletic group.

Groups that do not fit this definition are unacceptable in cladistics.

Determining which similarities between species are relevant to grouping the species in a clade is a challenge.

It is especially important to distinguish similarities that are based on shared ancestry or homology from those that are based on convergent evolution or analogy.

As a general rule, the more homologous parts that two species share, the more closely related they are.

Also, the more complex two structures are, the less likely that they evolved independently.

For example, the forelimbs of bats and birds are analogous adaptations for flight because the fossil record shows that both evolved independently from the walking forelimbs of different ancestors.

The presence of forelimbs in both birds and bats is homologous, though, at a higher level of the cladogram, at the level of tetrapods.

The question of homology versus analogy often depends on the level of the clade that is being examined.

Systematists must sort through homologous features or characters to separate shared derived characters from shared primitive characters.

A shared derived character is unique to a particular clade.

A shared primitive character is found not only in the clade being analyzed, but older clades too.

Shared derived characters are useful in establishing a phylogeny, but shared primitive characters are not.

For example, the presence of hair is a good character to distinguish the clade of mammals from other tetrapods.

However, the presence of a backbone can qualify as a shared derived character, but at a deeper branch point that distinguishes all vertebrates from other mammals.

Shared derived characters are useful in establishing a phylogeny, but shared primitive characters are not.

The status of a character as analogous versus homologous or shared versus primitive may depend on the level at which the analysis is being performed.

A key step in cladistic analysis is outgroup comparison which is used to differentiate shared primitive characters from shared derived ones.

To do this we need to identify an outgroup:

To study the relationships among five vertebrates (the ingroup): a leopard, a turtle, a salamander, a tuna, and a lamprey, on a cladogram, then an animal called the lancet would be a good choice.

In an outgroup analysis, the assumption is that any homologies shared by the ingroup and outgroup must be primitive characters already present in the ancestor common to both groups.

Homologies present in some or all of the ingroup taxa must have evolved after the divergence of the ingroup and outgroup taxa.

Analyzing the taxonomic distribution of homologies enables us to identify the sequence in which derived characters evolved during vertebrate phylogeny.

A cladogram presents the chronological sequence of branching during the evolutionary history of a set of organisms.

Systematists can use cladograms to place species in the taxonomic hierarchy.

However, some systematists argue that the hierarchical system is antiquated because such a classification must be rearranged when a cladogram is revised based on new evidence.

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3. Systematists can infer phylogeny from molecular evidence

The application of molecular methods and data for comparing species and tracing phylogenies has accelerated revision of taxonomic trees.

Molecular systematics makes it possible to assess phylogenetic relationships that cannot be measured by comparative anatomy and other non-molecular methods.

Most molecular systematics is based on a comparison of nucleotide sequences in DNA, or RNA.

The rates of change in DNA sequences varies from one part of the genome to another.

The first step in DNA comparisons is to align homologous DNA sequences for the species we are comparing.

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4. The principle of parsimony helps systematists reconstruct phylogeny

The process of converting data into phylogenetic trees can be daunting problem.

As we consider more and more taxa, the number of possible trees increases dramatically.

Even computer analyses of these data sets can take too long to search for the tree that best fits the DNA data.

Systematists use the principle of parsimony to choose among the many possible trees to find the tree that best fits the data.

The principle of parsimony ("Occam's Razor") states that a theory about nature should be the simplest explanation that is consistent with the facts.

In phylogenetic analysis, parsimony is used to justify the choice of a tree that represents the smallest number of evolutionary changes.

As an example, if we wanted to use the DNA sequences from seven sites to determine the most parsimonious arrangement of four species, we would begin by tabulating the sequence data.

Then, we would draw all possible phylogenies for the four species.

We would trace the number of events (mutations) necessary on each tree to produce the data in our DNA table.

After all the DNA sites have been added to each tree we add up the total events for each tree and determine which tree required the fewest changes, the most parsimonious tree.

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5. Phylogenetic trees are hypotheses

The rationale for using parsimony as a guide to our choice among many possible trees is that for any species' characters, hereditary fidelity is more common than change.

A cladogram that is not the most parsimonious would assume an unnecessarily complicated scenario, rather than the simplest explanation.

In the absence of conflicting information, the most parsimonious tree is the logical choice among alternative hypotheses.

For example, based on the number of heart chambers alone, birds and mammals, both with four chambers, appear to be more closely related to each other than lizards with three chambers.

But abundant evidence indicated that birds and mammals evolved from different reptilian ancestors.

Regardless of the source of data (DNA sequence, morphology, etc.), the most reliable trees are based on the largest data base.

Occasionally misjudging an analogous similarity in morphology or gene sequence as a shared derived homology is less likely to distort a phylogenetic tree if each clade in the tree is defined by several derived characters.

The strongest phylogenetic hypotheses of all are supported by both the morphological and molecular evidence.

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6. Molecular clocks may keep track of evolutionary time

The timing of evolutionary events has rested primarily on the fossil record.

Recently, molecular clocks have been applied to place the origin of taxonomic groups in time.

For example, the homologous proteins of bats and dolphins are much more alike than are those of sharks and tuna.

Proportional differences in DNA sequences can be applied to access the relative chronology of branching in phylogeny, but adjustments for absolute time must be viewed with some caution.

Each molecular clock must be calibrated in actual time.

Typically, one graphs the number of amino acid or nucleotide differences against the times for a series of evolutionary events known from the fossil record.

The molecular clock approach assumes that much of the change in DNA sequences is due to genetic drift and selectively neutral.

If certain DNA changes were favored by natural selection, then the rate would probably be too irregular to mark time accurately.

Also, some biologists are skeptical of conclusions derived from molecular clocks that have been extrapolated to time spans beyond the calibration in the fossil record.

The molecular clock approach has been used to date the jump of the HIV virus from related SIV viruses that infect chimpanzees and other primates to humans.

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7. Modern systematics is flourishing with lively debate

Systematics is thriving at the interface of modern evolutionary biology and taxonomic theory.

For example, the fossil record, comparative anatomy, and molecular comparisons all concur that crocodiles are more closely related to birds than to lizards and snakes.

In other cases, molecular data present a different picture than other approaches.

Between these two extremes is a phylogenetic fuse hypothesis.

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Dr. Graeme Lindbeck .