Chapter 1 Bio320 PDF
Chapter 1 Bio320 PDF
1.1 Terminology:
1. Biodiversity - The variety of living organisms and the variety of ecosystems that they form.
2. Systematics - The scientific study of the diversity of organisms and their evolutionary relationships.
3. Taxonomy - The science of naming, describing and classifying organisms.
4. Classification - Arranging organisms into groups based on their similarities, which reflect historical
relationships among lineages.
Homology refers to the presence in two or more species of a structure derived from a recent
common ancestor.
Homologous structures have the same structure, different functions & show a common ancestry.
Eg. The bones in a bat's wing, human's arm, penguin's flipper are the same (homologous), but their
functions are different.
Shared ancestral characters (plesiomorphic characters) are traits that were present in an ancestral
species and remain present in all the groups that descended from that ancestor.
E.g. Vertebral column present in all vertebrates
Shared derived characters (synapomorphic characters) are traits found in two or more taxa that
first appeared in their most recent common ancestor.
E.g. Between dogs, dolphins and whale which are all mammals, the absence of hair in
dolphins and whales is a derived character within mammals providing evidence that these animals
evolved from a common ancestor not shared by dogs.
3. Polyphyletic taxon
- The group that consists of several evolutionary lines and not including the most recent common
ancestor of the included lineages.
In determining the relationships among organisms, systematists use a variety of data and methods.
Three Systematic Approaches:
1. Phenetics or numerical taxonomy
2. Evolutionary systematics (classical evolutionary systematics)
3. Phylogenetic systematics (cladistics)