Lecture 1.introduction To Systematics
Lecture 1.introduction To Systematics
SYSTEMATICS
Lecture 1
WHAT IS SYSTEMATICS?
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SYSTEMATICS
The study of biological
diversity and evolutionary
relationships among organisms,
both extinct and modern.
SYSTEMATICS
attempts to organize
species into clades, which
means that each group
includes an ancestral
species and all of its
descendants.
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Example
Biologists reconstruct
phylogenies like that in
Figure 26.2 using
systematics
MOLECULAR SYSTEMATICS
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MOLECULAR SYSTEMATICS
• One goal of modern systematics is to create
taxonomic groups that reflect evolutionary
relationships.
PHYLOGENETIC TREE
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WHAT IS TAXONOMY?
TAXONOMY
field of biology that is concerned
with the theory, practice, and rules
of classifying living and extinct
organisms and viruses.
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• The broadest groups are the three domains, called Bacteria, Archaea,
and Eukarya, followed by supergroups, KINGDOMS, PHYLA, CLASSES,
ORDERS, FAMILIES, GENERA, AND SPECIES.
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GRAY WOLF
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SYSTEMATICS VERSUS
TAXONOMY
1. Definition of terms
SYSTEMATICS
• refers to the scientific study and
classification of organisms for determination
of the evolutionary relationship of organisms
TAXONOMY
• refers to describing, naming, and classifying
of organisms
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NOMENCLATURE CLASSIFICATION
assigning organisms to a
group or taxa after thorough
assigning correct biological
analysis of traits
names to organisms
(morphological,
following scientifically
physiological, genetic, etc)
accepted standards
to best reflect evolutionary
relationships
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CLADISTICS
method of reconstructing evolutionary trees to reflect evolutionary
relationships or by which organisms diverge to form clades (cladogram)
PHENETICS
study of relationships among a group of organisms on the basis of the
degree of similarity (phenogram)
PHYLOGENETICS
broad study of evolutionary relationships among organisms
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MiCROTAXONOMY
• taxonomic grouping of organisms
at the species level, including
subspecies, varieties, and ranks
below the species level
MaCROTAXONOMY
• taxonomic procedures/ study
involved in defining taxonomic
ranks above the species level
EVOLUTION
is used to describe a heritable
change in one or more
characteristics of a population from
one generation to the
next.
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Evolution
MICROEVOLUTION- can be viewed on a small scale as
it relates to changes in a single gene or allele
frequencies in a population over time, or
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Microevolution
PHYLOGENETIC CONSTRUCTION
Goals of Taxonomy and Systematics
Systematics require
an understanding of
evolution and to Genetics is very
deduce important as all
phylogenetic variations are
relationships from genetic in nature.
theoretical and
empirical data.
Figure source:
https://www.ebi.ac.uk/training/online/course/introduction-
phylogenetics/what-phylogenetics
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Evolutionary relationships
change through time as
biologists add on to existing
knowledge.
4. Malabrigo (2016)
• To provide a convenient method of identifying, naming and describing taxa;
1.
• To provide an inventory of taxa, and to provide local, regional, and continental flora and/or
3. fauna;
• To provide an integrating and unifying rule in the training of Biology students in regards to
5. the relationship of taxonomy/ systematics with all the biological fields.
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Systematics and
taxonomy have refined
our understanding of the
tree of life. It has
improved our sense of
biological relationships
which, by extension,
improved our search for
biological applications
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Systematics is an important foundation for all biological sciences as it lays down species nomenclature. Species names are
prerequisite for a sound biological inquiry.
Biological
Nomenclature
Description applications
and
and diagnosis and ecological
classification
importance
5. Malabrigo (2016)
To determine by comparison what unique properties of every species and higher taxon are;
To determine what properties certain taxa have in common with each other;
To determine what the biological causes for the differences or shared characters are;
To determine variation within taxa (infra), and the causes for this variation
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HIERARCHY • refers to the ascending series of levels or ranks with the one above inclusive
of all below
RANK • is a level within the hierarchy or the location of a category in the taxonomic
hierarchy e.g. genus is between family and species
POSITION
• of a taxon is its place as an element of a taxon of the next higher rank e.g.
Mangifera indica is a species under the genus Mangifera, Mangifera is a genus
under Family Anacardiaceae
e.g. the pisciform of the fish and the dolphin are analogous but the
mammary glands of the dolphins and the dog are homologous
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• Natural selection
EVOLUTIONARY • Genetic drift (genetic bottleneck and founders
FORCES effect)
DRIVING • Gene flow driven by migration of organisms
VARIATION • Non-random sexual selection
• Artificial selection
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6. Malabrigo (2016)
1. PIONEER PHASE – discovery of classification, naming and identification of organisms
2. CONSOLIDATION PHASE – synthesis mostly based on gross morphology of field and
museum knowledge in the preparation of floras, fauna, monographs, manuals to be the
basis of classification systems
3. EXPERIMENTAL/ BIOSYSTEMATIC PHASE – the analysis of breeding system, variation
pattern, evolutionary potential, and pertinent work in the chemical, numerical, anatomical,
cytological, embryological and phaleonological aspects of systematics
4. HOLOTAXONOMIC PHASE – analysis and synthesis of all information system based on
evolutionary and phylogenetic relationship
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CLASSIFICATION NOMENCLATURE IDENTIFICATION DESCRIPTION
REFERENCES
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