Define taxonomy
the theory and practice of classification and naming
define systematics
the study of biodiversity and the evolutionary relationships among organisms
Carolus Linnaeus
1707-1778
- father of taxonomy
- binomial nomenclature
- hierarchical system of classification
define a taxon
a single named taxonomic unit at any level (plural = taxa)
7 taxa
kingdom (kingdoms)
phylum (phyla)
class (classes)
order (orders)
family (families)
genus (genera)
species (species)
what is the purpose of a biological classification?
systematics research requires
a robust and stable system for classifying organisms (i.e. taxonomy)
describe how phylogenies arise/what they are made up of
node
corresponds to historical lineage splitting events, when one lineage splits into two
branches/ edges
correspond to single ancestor-descendant lineages. All branches are connected by nodes
tips/leaves/terminals/OTUs
tips do not have represented descendants. can be individuals, species, clades
internal vs external branches
external branches (aka terminal branches) connect a tip and a node. internal branches connect two nodes
root
sister groups/taxa
those that are immediate descendants of the same ancestor, eg sister species, sister branches, sister clades
parents and daughters
parent branches give rise to daughter branches
ingroup
consists of the focal species in a phylogenetic study
outgroup
a more distant relative of the in-group taxa; can help to root the phylogeny and determine what character states are ancestral
MRCA
most recent common ancestor; the youngest node that is ancestral to all lineages in a given group of taxa
clade
monophyly
paraphyly
polyphyly
for the species in a clade a trait is ancestral if
it was inherited in its present form from the MRCA of the clade
for the species in a clade, a trait is derived if
it originated within the clade, ie in a descendant of the clade’s MRCA