Taxonomic systems

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Taxonomy, the science of classifying organisms, is based on phylogeny. Early taxonomic systems had no theoretical basis; organisms were grouped according to apparent similarity. Since the publication in 1859 of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, however, taxonomy has been based on the accepted propositions of evolutionary descent and relationship.

The data and conclusions of phylogeny show clearly that the tree of life is the product of a historical process of evolution and that degrees of resemblance within and between groups correspond to degrees of relationship by descent from common ancestors. A fully developed phylogeny is essential for the devising of a taxonomy that reflects the natural relationships within the world of living things.

Evidence for specific phylogenies

Tentative phylogenetic scheme for the evolution of the human lineage. Solid bars indicate the time ranges during which species are thought to have existed, based on fossil evidence. Dotted lines signify evolutionary relationships between hominin species that have been proposed on the basis of the fossil evidence.

Biologists who postulate phylogenies derive their most-useful evidence from the fields of paleontology, comparative anatomy, comparative embryology, and molecular genetics. Studies of the molecular structure of genes and of the geographic distribution of flora and fauna are also useful. The fossil record is often used to determine the phylogeny of groups containing hard body parts; it is also used to date divergence times of species in phylogenies that have been constructed on the basis of molecular evidence.

Most of the data used in making phylogenetic judgments have come from comparative anatomy and from embryology, although those are rapidly being surpassed by systems constructed using molecular data. In comparing features common to different species, anatomists try to distinguish between homologies, or similarities inherited from a common ancestor, and analogies, or similarities that arise in response to similar habits and living conditions.

Biochemical investigations carried out in the latter half of the 20th and the early part of the 21st century contributed valuable data to phylogenetic studies. By counting differences in the sequence of units that make up protein and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) molecules, researchers have devised a tool for measuring the degree to which different species have diverged since evolving from a common ancestor. Because mitochondrial DNA has very high mutation rates compared with nuclear DNA, it has been useful for establishing relationships among groups that have diverged recently. Essentially, the application of molecular genetics to systematics is similar to the use of radioisotopes in geologic dating: molecules change at different rates, with some, such as mitochondrial DNA, evolving rapidly and others, such as ribosomal RNA, evolving slowly. An important assumption then in using molecules for phylogeny reconstruction is to select the appropriate gene for the age of the taxon under study.

Phenetics versus cladistics

The methodology of phylogenetic work rests on two approaches at present: numerical taxonomy (phenetics) and phylogenetic systematics (cladistics). The most-direct difference between the two methods is that phenetics classifies species by using as many characteristics as possible and arranges them by similarity regardless of any evolutionary relationships.

The phenetics approach, which arose in the 1950s, based classification strictly on similarities between organisms and emphasized numerical analyses of a set of phenotypic characteristics (that is, biological characters that are observable). In the name of objectivity, one simply counted common characters without respect to ancestry, and divisions were made on the basis of totals: the more characters in common, the closer the classification. However, in phenetics, the shared history between one organism and another, such as the archosaur ancestry of both crocodiles and birds, was simply irrelevant. Other problems, such as the precise definition of a “character” (that is, an observable feature, or trait, of an organism), required subjective decisions, thereby reducing the credibility of phenetics as an objective approach to phylogeny. Although the tabulation of common characters remains very important in developing a species’s phylogeny, taxonomists have moved away from phenetics as a viable approach.

Cladistics, on the other hand, does not base species classification on an assemblage of all shared characters between one species and another. It bases the classification of a group of species solely on their most-recent common ancestor. Taken from work by German zoologist Willi Hennig in the 1950s, cladistics uses only shared derived characters—that is, selected characteristics that infer monophyly (descent from a single species) or those that are expressed in all descendants of a common ancestor. Such uniquely shared historical (or derived) characteristics are called synapomorphies.

For example, suppose that there is an original species marked by character A, and from that three species eventually evolve. The original species first breaks into two successor groups, in one of which A evolves into the character a; that successor group then breaks into two daughter groups, both of which have a. The other original successor group retains A throughout, with no further division. In that case, a is a synapomorphy, since the two species with a evolved from an ancestral species that had a uniquely. Therefore, the possessors of a must be classified more closely to each other than to the third species. Consequently, by means of cladistics, crocodiles and birds are classified together, before they can be jointly linked to lizards. (For additional information on the philosophical underpinnings of phenetics and cladistics, see biology, philosophy of: taxonomy).