Biology 130 Chapter 20
shared ancestral character
describes a characteristic on a phylogenetic tree that is shared by all organisms on the tree
shared derived character
describes a characteristic on a phylogenetic tree that is shared only by a certain clade of organisms
genus
division of family in the taxonomic classification system; the first part of the binomial scientific name
systematics
field of organizing and classifying organisms based on evolutionary relationships
sister taxa
two lineages that diverged from the same branch point
basal taxon
branch on a phylogenetic tree that has not diverged significantly from the root ancestor
polytomy
branch on a phylogenetic tree with more than two groups or taxa
monophyletic group
(also, clade) organisms that share a single ancestor
analogy
(also, homoplasy) characteristic that is similar between organisms by convergent evolution, not due to the same evolutionary path
maximum parsimony
applying the simplest, most obvious way with the least number of steps
phylogenetic tree
diagram used to reflect the evolutionary relationships among organisms or groups of organisms
order
division of class in the taxonomic classification system
kingdom
division of domain in the taxonomic classification system
phylum
division of kingdom in the taxonomic classification system
family
division of order in the taxonomic classification system
class
division of phylum in the taxonomic classification system
The different levels of the taxonomic classification system are:
domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species
phylogeny
evolutionary history and relationship of an organism or group of organisms
taxonomy
science of classifying organisms
rooted
single ancestral lineage on a phylogenetic tree to which all organisms represented in the diagram relate
taxon
single level in the taxonomic classification system
binomial nomenclature
system of two-part scientific names for an organism, which includes genus and species names branch point
cladistics
system used to organize homologous traits to describe phylogenies
molecular systematics
technique using molecular evidence to identify phylogenetic relationships