Phylogeny and History of Life - Ch. 20 Flashcards

1
Q

Systematic

A

the field that scientists use to organize and classify organisms based on evolutionary relationships. Researchers may use data from fossils, from studying the body part structures, or molecules that an organism uses, and DNA analysis.

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2
Q

Taxonomy

A

the science of classifying organisms to construct internationally shared classification systems with each organism placed into increasingly more inclusive groupings.

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3
Q

What is the order of the classification of life?

A

kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species

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4
Q

Binomial nomenclature

A

two-word specific name of an organism. It takes up genus and species. Both are italicized but the species is not capitalized while the genus is.

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5
Q

Phylogeny

A

evolutionary history and relationship of an organism or group of organisms. A phylogeny describes the organism’s relationships, such as from which organisms it may have evolved, or to which species it is most closely related. Phylogenetic relationships provide information on shared ancestry but not necessarily on how organisms are similar or different.

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6
Q

Ancestral lineage

A

all organisms represented in the diagram relate to one ancestor

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7
Q

Branch point

A

when a split occurs in a phylogenetic tree, it represents where a single lineage evolved into a distinct new one.

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8
Q

Most recent common ancestor

A

We can trace the pathway from the origin of life to any individual species by navigating through the evolutionary branches between the two points. Also, by starting with a single species and tracing back towards the “trunk” of the tree, one can discover species’ ancestors, as well as where lineages share a common ancestry. In addition, we can use the tree to study entire groups of organisms.

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9
Q

Basal taxon

A

a lineage that evolved early from the root that remains unbranched

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10
Q

Sister taxa

A

two lineages stemming from the same branch point

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11
Q

Polytomy

A

A branch with more than two lineages and serves to illustrate where scientists have not definitively determined all of the relationships.

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12
Q

What should be noted for sister taxa and polytomy?

A

although sister taxa and polytomy do share an ancestor, it does not mean that the groups of organisms split or evolved from each other. Organisms in two taxa may have split at a specific branch point, but neither taxon gave rise to the other.

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13
Q

What are the different categories of branch lengths?

A

genetic change or time

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14
Q

Homologous structures

A

have the same structure of a body part, like an arm, but all differ in structure. For example, the lizard’s arm is for digging and the bird’s arm is for flying.

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15
Q

Divergent evolution

A

two species that evolve in diverse directions from a common point

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16
Q

Homologies

A

Similarities between organisms can stem either from shared evolutionary history

17
Q

Analogies structures

A

The structure of a body part is different but the function of it is the same. For example, the turtle and fish fin are completely different in structure, yet they both serve to help the animal swim

18
Q

Convergent evolution

A

independently in species that do not share a common ancestry

19
Q

Analogies

A

Similarities between organisms can stem from separate evolutionary paths

20
Q

Cladogram

A

diagram that depicts patterns of a shared characteristic among groups

21
Q

Clade

A

groups of a species that includes an ancestral species and all descendants

22
Q

Phylogenetic tree

A

branching diagram that shows evolutionary history of a group of organisms

23
Q

Principle of maximum parsimony

A

use the simplest explanation (fewest DNA changes) to construct phylogenetic trees

24
Q

Molecular clock

A

measure evolutionary change based on regions of genome change based on regions of genome that appeal to evolve at constant rates
used to estimate dates of past evolutionary events

25
Q

Tree of life

A

3 domains of life consisting of bacteria, archaea, and eukarya. There is a common ancestor among all three domains.

26
Q

Characteristics of all life forms

A

All domains have DNA and RNA as carriers of genetics, universal genetic code, and conserved metabolic pathways.

27
Q

Characteristics of all eukaryotes

A

all eukaryotes have a cytoskeleton, membrane-bound organelles, linear chromosomes, and endomembrane systems