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Taxonomy & Macroevolution

Taxonomy & Macroevolution. Macroevolution refers to the major evolutionary trends. Major phenotypic changes such as wings with feather, legs, the opposable thumb changes are usually based on a preceding structure or form (lungs from swim bladders)

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Taxonomy & Macroevolution

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  1. Taxonomy &Macroevolution

  2. Macroevolution refers to the major evolutionary trends • Major phenotypic changes such as wings with feather, legs, the opposable thumb • changes are usually based on a preceding structure or form (lungs from swim bladders) • read about regulatory genes, rates of growth and timing on page 340

  3. Adaptive radiation • Diversification allows an organism to fill a variety of ecological roles (niches) • Diversification may result in speciation • Adaptive zone = ecological niche

  4. Extinction • Background extinction • Mass extinction • Extirpation • Extinction vortex • Minimum viable population

  5. Evolutionary change • Punctuated equilibrium • gradualism

  6. Taxonomy • Scientific classification of living things • everything is classified, even things that died a long time ago…(missing link)

  7. Taxons • Kingdom (Animalia) • Phylum (Chordata) • Class (Mammalia) • Order (Carnivora) • Family (Felidae) • Genus (Felis) • Specific epithet (Catus)

  8. Carnivore Felidae Felis Catus Primates Hominidae Homo Sapiens AnimaliaChordataMammalia

  9. AnimaliaChordataMammalia • Order Primate Primate Primate • Family Hominidae Pongidae Lasiopygidae • Genus Homo Pan Macaca • Spc Epi sapiens troglodytes mulatta • Taxon Human Chimpanzee Rhesus Mnk

  10. 5 Kingdoms • Prokaryote (sometimes called monerans) • Protista (protozo, algae, slime molds) • Fungi • Plantae • Animalia

  11. Systematics • Classification of organisms into groups determined by evolutionary relationship • evolutionary history of a species (phylogeny) • Monophyletic - common ancestor (clade) • Polyphyletic - not a common ancestor

  12. Systematics • Ancestral characters - traits shared with ancestors • Derived characters - traits not shared with ancestors • see discussion of importance of traits on p 368

  13. 3 approaches to taxonomy • Phenetics - based on phenotypic traits (why are dolphins more closely related to humans than to fish?) • Cladistics - stresses phylogeny (evolutionary history, common ancestry) • Classic taxonomy - phylogenetic tree

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