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Evolutionary taxonomy

Evolutionary taxonomy, evolutionary systematics or Darwinian classification is a branch of biological classification that seeks to classify organisms using a combination of phylogenetic relationship (shared descent), progenitor-descendant relationship (serial descent), and degree of evolutionary change. This type of taxonomy may consider whole taxa rather than single species, so that groups of species can be inferred as giving rise to new groups.[1] The concept found its most well-known form in the modern evolutionary synthesis of the early 1940s.

Evolutionary taxonomy differs from strict pre-Darwinian Linnaean taxonomy (producing orderly lists only), in that it builds evolutionary trees. While in phylogenetic nomenclature each taxon must consist of a single ancestral node and all its descendants, evolutionary taxonomy allows for groups to be excluded from their parent taxa (e.g. dinosaurs are not considered to include birds, but to have given rise to them), thus permitting paraphyletic taxa.[2][3]

Origin of evolutionary taxonomy Edit

 
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck's 1815 diagram showing branching in the course of invertebrate evolution

Evolutionary taxonomy arose as a result of the influence of the theory of evolution on Linnaean taxonomy. The idea of translating Linnaean taxonomy into a sort of dendrogram of the Animal and Plant Kingdoms was formulated toward the end of the 18th century, well before Charles Darwin's book On the Origin of Species was published.[4] The first to suggest that organisms had common descent was Pierre-Louis Moreau de Maupertuis in his 1751 Essai de Cosmologie,[5][6] Transmutation of species entered wider scientific circles with Erasmus Darwin's 1796 Zoönomia and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck's 1809 Philosophie Zoologique.[7] The idea was popularised in the English-speaking world by the speculative but widely read Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, published anonymously by Robert Chambers in 1844.[8]

Following the appearance of On the Origin of Species, Tree of Life representations became popular in scientific works. In On the Origin of Species, the ancestor remained largely a hypothetical species; Darwin was primarily occupied with showing the principle, carefully refraining from speculating on relationships between living or fossil organisms and using theoretical examples only.[7] In contrast, Chambers had proposed specific hypotheses, the evolution of placental mammals from marsupials, for example.[9]

Following Darwin's publication, Thomas Henry Huxley used the fossils of Archaeopteryx and Hesperornis to argue that the birds are descendants of the dinosaurs.[10] Thus, a group of extant animals could be tied to a fossil group. The resulting description, that of dinosaurs "giving rise to" or being "the ancestors of" birds, exhibits the essential hallmark of evolutionary taxonomic thinking.

The past three decades have seen a dramatic increase in the use of DNA sequences for reconstructing phylogeny and a parallel shift in emphasis from evolutionary taxonomy towards Hennig's 'phylogenetic systematics'.[7]

Today, with the advent of modern genomics, scientists in every branch of biology make use of molecular phylogeny to guide their research. One common method is multiple sequence alignment.

Cavalier-Smith,[7] G. G. Simpson and Ernst Mayr[11] are some representative evolutionary taxonomists.

New methods in modern evolutionary systematics Edit

Efforts in combining modern methods of cladistics, phylogenetics, and DNA analysis with classical views of taxonomy have recently appeared. Certain authors have found that phylogenetic analysis is acceptable scientifically as long as paraphyly at least for certain groups is allowable. Such a stance is promoted in papers by Tod F. Stuessy[12] and others. A particularly strict form of evolutionary systematics has been presented by Richard H. Zander in a number of papers, but summarized in his "Framework for Post-Phylogenetic Systematics".[13]

Briefly, Zander's pluralistic systematics is based on the incompleteness of each of the theories: A method that cannot falsify a hypothesis is as unscientific as a hypothesis that cannot be falsified. Cladistics generates only trees of shared ancestry, not serial ancestry. Taxa evolving seriatim cannot be dealt with by analyzing shared ancestry with cladistic methods. Hypotheses such as adaptive radiation from a single ancestral taxon cannot be falsified with cladistics. Cladistics offers a way to cluster by trait transformations but no evolutionary tree can be entirely dichotomous. Phylogenetics posits shared ancestral taxa as causal agents for dichotomies yet there is no evidence for the existence of such taxa. Molecular systematics uses DNA sequence data for tracking evolutionary changes, thus paraphyly and sometimes phylogenetic polyphyly signal ancestor-descendant transformations at the taxon level, but otherwise molecular phylogenetics makes no provision for extinct paraphyly. Additional transformational analysis is needed to infer serial descent.

 
Cladogram of the moss genus Didymodon showing taxon transformations. Colors denote dissilient groups.

The Besseyan cactus or commagram is the best evolutionary tree for showing both shared and serial ancestry. First, a cladogram or natural key is generated. Generalized ancestral taxa are identified and specialized descendant taxa are noted as coming off the lineage with a line of one color representing the progenitor through time. A Besseyan cactus or commagram is then devised that represents both shared and serial ancestry. Progenitor taxa may have one or more descendant taxa. Support measures in terms of Bayes factors may be given, following Zander's method of transformational analysis using decibans.

Cladistic analysis groups taxa by shared traits but incorporates a dichotomous branching model borrowed from phenetics. It is essentially a simplified dichotomous natural key, although reversals are tolerated. The problem, of course, is that evolution is not necessarily dichotomous. An ancestral taxon generating two or more descendants requires a longer, less parsimonious tree. A cladogram node summarizes all traits distal to it, not of any one taxon, and continuity in a cladogram is from node to node, not taxon to taxon. This is not a model of evolution, but is a variant of hierarchical cluster analysis (trait changes and non-ultrametric branches. This is why a tree based solely on shared traits is not called an evolutionary tree but merely a cladistic tree. This tree reflects to a large extent evolutionary relationships through trait transformations but ignores relationships made by species-level transformation of extant taxa.

 
A Besseyan cactus evolutionary tree of the moss genus Didymodon with generalized taxa in color and specialized descendants in white. Support measures are given in terms of Bayes factors, using deciban analysis of taxon transformation. Only two progenitors are considered unknown shared ancestors.

Phylogenetics attempts to inject a serial element by postulating ad hoc, undemonstrable shared ancestors at each node of a cladistic tree. There are in number, for a fully dichotomous cladogram, one less invisible shared ancestor than the number of terminal taxa. We get, then, in effect a dichotomous natural key with an invisible shared ancestor generating each couplet. This cannot imply a process-based explanation without justification of the dichotomy, and supposition of the shared ancestors as causes. The cladistic form of analysis of evolutionary relationships cannot falsify any genuine evolutionary scenario incorporating serial transformation, according to Zander.[14]

Zander has detailed methods for generating support measures for molecular serial descent[15] and for morphological serial descent using Bayes factors and sequential Bayes analysis through Turing deciban or Shannon informational bit addition.[16][17][18][19]

The Tree of Life Edit

 
Evolution of the vertebrates at class level, width of spindles indicating number of families. Spindle diagrams are often used in evolutionary taxonomy.

As more and more fossil groups were found and recognized in the late 19th and early 20th century, palaeontologists worked to understand the history of animals through the ages by linking together known groups.[20] The Tree of life was slowly being mapped out, with fossil groups taking up their position in the tree as understanding increased.

These groups still retained their formal Linnaean taxonomic ranks. Some of them are paraphyletic in that, although every organism in the group is linked to a common ancestor by an unbroken chain of intermediate ancestors within the group, some other descendants of that ancestor lie outside the group. The evolution and distribution of the various taxa through time is commonly shown as a spindle diagram (often called a Romerogram after the American palaeontologist Alfred Romer) where various spindles branch off from each other, with each spindle representing a taxon. The width of the spindles are meant to imply the abundance (often number of families) plotted against time.[21]

Vertebrate palaeontology had mapped out the evolutionary sequence of vertebrates as currently understood fairly well by the closing of the 19th century, followed by a reasonable understanding of the evolutionary sequence of the plant kingdom by the early 20th century. The tying together of the various trees into a grand Tree of Life only really became possible with advancements in microbiology and biochemistry in the period between the World Wars.

Terminological difference Edit

The two approaches, evolutionary taxonomy and the phylogenetic systematics derived from Willi Hennig, differ in the use of the word "monophyletic". For evolutionary systematicists, "monophyletic" means only that a group is derived from a single common ancestor. In phylogenetic nomenclature, there is an added caveat that the ancestral species and all descendants should be included in the group.[2] The term "holophyletic" has been proposed for the latter meaning. As an example, amphibians are monophyletic under evolutionary taxonomy, since they have arisen from fishes only once. Under phylogenetic taxonomy, amphibians do not constitute a monophyletic group in that the amniotes (reptiles, birds and mammals) have evolved from an amphibian ancestor and yet are not considered amphibians. Such paraphyletic groups are rejected in phylogenetic nomenclature, but are considered a signal of serial descent by evolutionary taxonomists.[22]

References Edit

  1. ^ Mayr, Ernst & Bock, W.J. (2002), "Classifications and other ordering systems" (PDF), J. Zool. Syst. Evol. Research, 40 (4): 169–94, doi:10.1046/j.1439-0469.2002.00211.x
  2. ^ a b Grant, V. (2003), "Incongruence between cladistic and taxonomic systems", American Journal of Botany, 90 (9): 1263–70, doi:10.3732/ajb.90.9.1263, PMID 21659226
  3. ^ Aubert, D (2015). "A formal analysis of phylogenetic terminology: Towards a reconsideration of the current paradigm in systematics". Phytoneuron. 2015–66: 1–54.
  4. ^ Archibald, J. David (2009). "Edward Hitchcock's Pre-Darwinian (1840) 'Tree of Life'" (PDF). Journal of the History of Biology. 42 (3): 561–592. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.688.7842. doi:10.1007/s10739-008-9163-y. PMID 20027787. S2CID 16634677.
  5. ^ J. S. Bromley, The new Cambridge modern history: The rise of Great Britain and Russia, 1688-1715/25, CUP Archive, 1970, ISBN 978-0-521-07524-4, pgs. 62-63.
  6. ^ Geoffrey Russell Richards Treasure, The making of modern Europe, 1648-1780, Taylor & Francis, 1985, ISBN 978-0-416-72370-0, pg. 142
  7. ^ a b c d Cavalier-Smith, Thomas (2010). "Deep phylogeny, ancestral groups and the four ages of life" (PDF). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 365 (1537): 111–132. doi:10.1098/rstb.2009.0161. PMC 2842702. PMID 20008390.
  8. ^ Secord, James A. (2000), Victorian Sensation: The Extraordinary Publication, Reception, and Secret Authorship of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-74410-0
  9. ^ Chambers, Robert (1844). Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation. London: John Churchill. p. 122. Retrieved 10 May 2013.
  10. ^ Huxley, T.H. (1876): Lectures on Evolution. New York Tribune. Extra. no 36. In Collected Essays IV: pp 46-138 original text w/ figures
  11. ^ Mahner, Martin; Bunge, Mario. Foundations of Biophilosophy. Springer, p. 251.
  12. ^ Stuessy, Tod F. (2010). "Paraphyly and the origin and classification of angiosperms". Taxon. 59 (3): 689–693. doi:10.1002/tax.593001.
  13. ^ Zander, Richard (2013). Framework for Post-Phylogenetic Systematics. St. Louis: Zetetic Publications, Amazon CreateSpace.
  14. ^ Zander, Richard (2014). "Response to a particularly nasty review in the journal Cladistics". Phytoneuron. 2014 (110): 1–4.
  15. ^ Zander, Richard (2014). "Support measures for caulistic macroevolutionary transformations in evolutionary trees". Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden. 100 (1–2): 100–107. doi:10.3417/2012090. S2CID 86754093.
  16. ^ Zander, Richard (2014). "Classical determination of monophyly exemplified with Didymodon s. lat. (Bryophyta). Part 1 of 3, synopsis and simplified concepts" (PDF). Phytoneuron. 2014 (78): 1–7. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  17. ^ Zander, Richard (2014). "Classical determination of monophyly, exemplified with Didymodon s. lat. (Bryophyta). Part 2 of 3, concepts" (PDF). Phytoneuron. 2014 (79): 1–23. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  18. ^ Zander, Richard (2014). "Classical determination of monophyly exemplified with Didymodon s. lat. (Bryophyta). Part 3 of 3, analysis" (PDF). Phytoneuron. 2014 (80): 1–19. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  19. ^ Zander R. H. 2018. Macroevolutionary Systematics of Streptotrichaceae of the Bryophyta and Application to Ecosystem Thermodynamic Stability. Edition 2. Zetetic Publications,  CreateSpace Independent Publishing, Amazon, St. Louis.
  20. ^ Rudwick, M. J. S. (1985), The Meaning of Fossils: Episodes in the History of Palaeontology, University of Chicago Press, p. 24, ISBN 978-0-226-73103-2
  21. ^ White, T.; Kazlev, M. A. "Phylogeny and Systematics : Glossary - Romerogram". palaeos.com. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
  22. ^ Zander, R. H. (2008). "Evolutionary inferences from non-monophyly on molecular trees". Taxon. 57 (4): 1182–1188. doi:10.1002/tax.574011.

evolutionary, taxonomy, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, experts, without, removing, technical, details, july, 2018, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, evolutionary, systematics, darwi. This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Evolutionary taxonomy evolutionary systematics or Darwinian classification is a branch of biological classification that seeks to classify organisms using a combination of phylogenetic relationship shared descent progenitor descendant relationship serial descent and degree of evolutionary change This type of taxonomy may consider whole taxa rather than single species so that groups of species can be inferred as giving rise to new groups 1 The concept found its most well known form in the modern evolutionary synthesis of the early 1940s Evolutionary taxonomy differs from strict pre Darwinian Linnaean taxonomy producing orderly lists only in that it builds evolutionary trees While in phylogenetic nomenclature each taxon must consist of a single ancestral node and all its descendants evolutionary taxonomy allows for groups to be excluded from their parent taxa e g dinosaurs are not considered to include birds but to have given rise to them thus permitting paraphyletic taxa 2 3 Contents 1 Origin of evolutionary taxonomy 2 New methods in modern evolutionary systematics 3 The Tree of Life 4 Terminological difference 5 ReferencesOrigin of evolutionary taxonomy Edit Jean Baptiste Lamarck s 1815 diagram showing branching in the course of invertebrate evolutionEvolutionary taxonomy arose as a result of the influence of the theory of evolution on Linnaean taxonomy The idea of translating Linnaean taxonomy into a sort of dendrogram of the Animal and Plant Kingdoms was formulated toward the end of the 18th century well before Charles Darwin s book On the Origin of Species was published 4 The first to suggest that organisms had common descent was Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis in his 1751 Essai de Cosmologie 5 6 Transmutation of species entered wider scientific circles with Erasmus Darwin s 1796 Zoonomia and Jean Baptiste Lamarck s 1809 Philosophie Zoologique 7 The idea was popularised in the English speaking world by the speculative but widely read Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation published anonymously by Robert Chambers in 1844 8 Following the appearance of On the Origin of Species Tree of Life representations became popular in scientific works In On the Origin of Species the ancestor remained largely a hypothetical species Darwin was primarily occupied with showing the principle carefully refraining from speculating on relationships between living or fossil organisms and using theoretical examples only 7 In contrast Chambers had proposed specific hypotheses the evolution of placental mammals from marsupials for example 9 Following Darwin s publication Thomas Henry Huxley used the fossils of Archaeopteryx and Hesperornis to argue that the birds are descendants of the dinosaurs 10 Thus a group of extant animals could be tied to a fossil group The resulting description that of dinosaurs giving rise to or being the ancestors of birds exhibits the essential hallmark of evolutionary taxonomic thinking The past three decades have seen a dramatic increase in the use of DNA sequences for reconstructing phylogeny and a parallel shift in emphasis from evolutionary taxonomy towards Hennig s phylogenetic systematics 7 Today with the advent of modern genomics scientists in every branch of biology make use of molecular phylogeny to guide their research One common method is multiple sequence alignment Cavalier Smith 7 G G Simpson and Ernst Mayr 11 are some representative evolutionary taxonomists New methods in modern evolutionary systematics EditThis section may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent third party sources July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Efforts in combining modern methods of cladistics phylogenetics and DNA analysis with classical views of taxonomy have recently appeared Certain authors have found that phylogenetic analysis is acceptable scientifically as long as paraphyly at least for certain groups is allowable Such a stance is promoted in papers by Tod F Stuessy 12 and others A particularly strict form of evolutionary systematics has been presented by Richard H Zander in a number of papers but summarized in his Framework for Post Phylogenetic Systematics 13 Briefly Zander s pluralistic systematics is based on the incompleteness of each of the theories A method that cannot falsify a hypothesis is as unscientific as a hypothesis that cannot be falsified Cladistics generates only trees of shared ancestry not serial ancestry Taxa evolving seriatim cannot be dealt with by analyzing shared ancestry with cladistic methods Hypotheses such as adaptive radiation from a single ancestral taxon cannot be falsified with cladistics Cladistics offers a way to cluster by trait transformations but no evolutionary tree can be entirely dichotomous Phylogenetics posits shared ancestral taxa as causal agents for dichotomies yet there is no evidence for the existence of such taxa Molecular systematics uses DNA sequence data for tracking evolutionary changes thus paraphyly and sometimes phylogenetic polyphyly signal ancestor descendant transformations at the taxon level but otherwise molecular phylogenetics makes no provision for extinct paraphyly Additional transformational analysis is needed to infer serial descent Cladogram of the moss genus Didymodon showing taxon transformations Colors denote dissilient groups The Besseyan cactus or commagram is the best evolutionary tree for showing both shared and serial ancestry First a cladogram or natural key is generated Generalized ancestral taxa are identified and specialized descendant taxa are noted as coming off the lineage with a line of one color representing the progenitor through time A Besseyan cactus or commagram is then devised that represents both shared and serial ancestry Progenitor taxa may have one or more descendant taxa Support measures in terms of Bayes factors may be given following Zander s method of transformational analysis using decibans Cladistic analysis groups taxa by shared traits but incorporates a dichotomous branching model borrowed from phenetics It is essentially a simplified dichotomous natural key although reversals are tolerated The problem of course is that evolution is not necessarily dichotomous An ancestral taxon generating two or more descendants requires a longer less parsimonious tree A cladogram node summarizes all traits distal to it not of any one taxon and continuity in a cladogram is from node to node not taxon to taxon This is not a model of evolution but is a variant of hierarchical cluster analysis trait changes and non ultrametric branches This is why a tree based solely on shared traits is not called an evolutionary tree but merely a cladistic tree This tree reflects to a large extent evolutionary relationships through trait transformations but ignores relationships made by species level transformation of extant taxa A Besseyan cactus evolutionary tree of the moss genus Didymodon with generalized taxa in color and specialized descendants in white Support measures are given in terms of Bayes factors using deciban analysis of taxon transformation Only two progenitors are considered unknown shared ancestors Phylogenetics attempts to inject a serial element by postulating ad hoc undemonstrable shared ancestors at each node of a cladistic tree There are in number for a fully dichotomous cladogram one less invisible shared ancestor than the number of terminal taxa We get then in effect a dichotomous natural key with an invisible shared ancestor generating each couplet This cannot imply a process based explanation without justification of the dichotomy and supposition of the shared ancestors as causes The cladistic form of analysis of evolutionary relationships cannot falsify any genuine evolutionary scenario incorporating serial transformation according to Zander 14 Zander has detailed methods for generating support measures for molecular serial descent 15 and for morphological serial descent using Bayes factors and sequential Bayes analysis through Turing deciban or Shannon informational bit addition 16 17 18 19 The Tree of Life EditMain article Tree of life biology Evolution of the vertebrates at class level width of spindles indicating number of families Spindle diagrams are often used in evolutionary taxonomy As more and more fossil groups were found and recognized in the late 19th and early 20th century palaeontologists worked to understand the history of animals through the ages by linking together known groups 20 The Tree of life was slowly being mapped out with fossil groups taking up their position in the tree as understanding increased These groups still retained their formal Linnaean taxonomic ranks Some of them are paraphyletic in that although every organism in the group is linked to a common ancestor by an unbroken chain of intermediate ancestors within the group some other descendants of that ancestor lie outside the group The evolution and distribution of the various taxa through time is commonly shown as a spindle diagram often called a Romerogram after the American palaeontologist Alfred Romer where various spindles branch off from each other with each spindle representing a taxon The width of the spindles are meant to imply the abundance often number of families plotted against time 21 Vertebrate palaeontology had mapped out the evolutionary sequence of vertebrates as currently understood fairly well by the closing of the 19th century followed by a reasonable understanding of the evolutionary sequence of the plant kingdom by the early 20th century The tying together of the various trees into a grand Tree of Life only really became possible with advancements in microbiology and biochemistry in the period between the World Wars Terminological difference EditThe two approaches evolutionary taxonomy and the phylogenetic systematics derived from Willi Hennig differ in the use of the word monophyletic For evolutionary systematicists monophyletic means only that a group is derived from a single common ancestor In phylogenetic nomenclature there is an added caveat that the ancestral species and all descendants should be included in the group 2 The term holophyletic has been proposed for the latter meaning As an example amphibians are monophyletic under evolutionary taxonomy since they have arisen from fishes only once Under phylogenetic taxonomy amphibians do not constitute a monophyletic group in that the amniotes reptiles birds and mammals have evolved from an amphibian ancestor and yet are not considered amphibians Such paraphyletic groups are rejected in phylogenetic nomenclature but are considered a signal of serial descent by evolutionary taxonomists 22 References Edit Mayr Ernst amp Bock W J 2002 Classifications and other ordering systems PDF J Zool Syst Evol Research 40 4 169 94 doi 10 1046 j 1439 0469 2002 00211 x a b Grant V 2003 Incongruence between cladistic and taxonomic systems American Journal of Botany 90 9 1263 70 doi 10 3732 ajb 90 9 1263 PMID 21659226 Aubert D 2015 A formal analysis of phylogenetic terminology Towards a reconsideration of the current paradigm in systematics Phytoneuron 2015 66 1 54 Archibald J David 2009 Edward Hitchcock s Pre Darwinian 1840 Tree of Life PDF Journal of the History of Biology 42 3 561 592 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 688 7842 doi 10 1007 s10739 008 9163 y PMID 20027787 S2CID 16634677 J S Bromley The new Cambridge modern history The rise of Great Britain and Russia 1688 1715 25 CUP Archive 1970 ISBN 978 0 521 07524 4 pgs 62 63 Geoffrey Russell Richards Treasure The making of modern Europe 1648 1780 Taylor amp Francis 1985 ISBN 978 0 416 72370 0 pg 142 a b c d Cavalier Smith Thomas 2010 Deep phylogeny ancestral groups and the four ages of life PDF Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 365 1537 111 132 doi 10 1098 rstb 2009 0161 PMC 2842702 PMID 20008390 Secord James A 2000 Victorian Sensation The Extraordinary Publication Reception and Secret Authorship of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 74410 0 Chambers Robert 1844 Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation London John Churchill p 122 Retrieved 10 May 2013 Huxley T H 1876 Lectures on Evolution New York Tribune Extra no 36 In Collected Essays IV pp 46 138 original text w figures Mahner Martin Bunge Mario Foundations of Biophilosophy Springer p 251 Stuessy Tod F 2010 Paraphyly and the origin and classification of angiosperms Taxon 59 3 689 693 doi 10 1002 tax 593001 Zander Richard 2013 Framework for Post Phylogenetic Systematics St Louis Zetetic Publications Amazon CreateSpace Zander Richard 2014 Response to a particularly nasty review in the journal Cladistics Phytoneuron 2014 110 1 4 Zander Richard 2014 Support measures for caulistic macroevolutionary transformations in evolutionary trees Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 100 1 2 100 107 doi 10 3417 2012090 S2CID 86754093 Zander Richard 2014 Classical determination of monophyly exemplified with Didymodon s lat Bryophyta Part 1 of 3 synopsis and simplified concepts PDF Phytoneuron 2014 78 1 7 Retrieved 4 January 2015 Zander Richard 2014 Classical determination of monophyly exemplified with Didymodon s lat Bryophyta Part 2 of 3 concepts PDF Phytoneuron 2014 79 1 23 Retrieved 4 January 2015 Zander Richard 2014 Classical determination of monophyly exemplified with Didymodon s lat Bryophyta Part 3 of 3 analysis PDF Phytoneuron 2014 80 1 19 Retrieved 4 January 2015 Zander R H 2018 Macroevolutionary Systematics of Streptotrichaceae of the Bryophyta and Application to Ecosystem Thermodynamic Stability Edition 2 Zetetic Publications CreateSpace Independent Publishing Amazon St Louis Rudwick M J S 1985 The Meaning of Fossils Episodes in the History of Palaeontology University of Chicago Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 226 73103 2 White T Kazlev M A Phylogeny and Systematics Glossary Romerogram palaeos com Retrieved 21 January 2013 Zander R H 2008 Evolutionary inferences from non monophyly on molecular trees Taxon 57 4 1182 1188 doi 10 1002 tax 574011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evolutionary taxonomy amp oldid 1170984190, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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