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Taxonomy and Species concepts

Taxonomy and Species concepts. The concept of the species. Idea (Greek) species (Latin) synonymous. Eidos (Greek) “ the visible look ” or “ outward form ”

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Taxonomy and Species concepts

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  1. Taxonomy and Species concepts

  2. The concept of the species • Idea (Greek) species (Latin) synonymous. • Eidos (Greek) “the visible look” or “outward form” • Plato – eidos -> immaterial unchanging forms, the eternal ideas (exist only in the mind).- the objects we sense are ephemeral manifestations of universal archetypes (the ideal oak tree). • Aristotle – used “idea” as group sharing common form • Aristotle’s “idea” translated to “species” in Latin

  3. Linnaeus – taxonomy (species were created, distinct forms, unchanging). • Evolution – species evolve BUT what is the “species” • Selection – individual levelgroups of individuals (populations) show a change in gene frequency

  4. Taxonomy • Taxonomy is naming and classifying objects • Classification can be based on similarities or differences.

  5. Linnaean Taxonomy • 1735 • Binomial nomenclature • Genus species • Based on physical appearance (phenotype) • Did not assume any form of evolutionary relationships

  6. Species Definitions

  7. Biological Species Concept – groups of actually or potentially interbreeding individuals within an area, which are reproductively isolated from other such groups (Mayr 1942).

  8. Phylogenetic Species Concept (Cladistic Species Concept) – the smallest diagnosable cluster of individual organisms within which there is a parental pattern of ancestry and descent (Cracraft 1983).

  9. Evolutionary Species Concept - a lineage which occupies an adaptive zone minimally different from that of any other lineage in its range and which evolves separately from all other lineages outside of its range (Van Valen 1976).

  10. Recognition Species Concept – defines species from the basis of gene recombination (Paterson 1985).

  11. Cohesion Species – emphasizes the mechanisms (gene flow, natural selection) that results in species cohesion (Tempelton 1989).

  12. Evolutionary Significant Unit (ESU)‏ • a population of organisms that is considered distinct for purposes of conservation. - Definitions of an ESU generally include at least one of the following criteria: 1. Current geographic separation 2. Genetic differentiation at neutral markers among ESUs caused by past restriction of gene flow 3. Locally adapted phenotypic traits caused by differences in selection.

  13. Why do we have so many definitions for a species?

  14. Problem with species concept • We are trying to impose a static concept on a dynamic process.

  15. Evolutionary classification • Phylogeny – evolutionary treeprovide inference as to which organisms evolved from which other ones • Systematics is the reconstruction and study of phylogenies

  16. Two basic schools of classification • Phylogenetics: classification based on ancestry and shared derived traits. • Phenetics: classification based on overall similarity of organisms based on morphology or molecular traits. 23

  17. Cladistics • A simple and objective way of constructing phylogenies (phylogenetic trees) • Focus on shared derived characters • Clade – group of organisms related by descent • Synapomorphy – shared derived character of a clade • Cladogram – the branching diagram representing the phylogeny

  18. Example

  19. Why does a cladogram require shared derived characters (homologies vs analogies)?

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