fbpx
Wikipedia

Phylogenetic nomenclature

Phylogenetic nomenclature is a method of nomenclature for taxa in biology that uses phylogenetic definitions for taxon names as explained below. This contrasts with the traditional approach, in which taxon names are defined by a type, which can be a specimen or a taxon of lower rank, and a description in words.[1] Phylogenetic nomenclature is currently regulated by the International Code of Phylogenetic Nomenclature (PhyloCode).

The clade shown by the dashed lines in each figure is specified by the ancestor X. Under the hypothesis that the relationships are as in the left tree, the clade includes X, A, B and C. Under the hypothesis that the relationships are as in the right tree, the clade includes X, A and B.

Definitions edit

Phylogenetic nomenclature ties names to clades, groups consisting of an ancestor and all its descendants. These groups can equivalently be called monophyletic. There are slightly different ways of specifying the ancestor, which are discussed below. Once the ancestor is specified, the meaning of the name is fixed: the ancestor and all organisms which are its descendants are included in the named taxon. Listing all these organisms (i.e. providing a full circumscription) requires the full phylogenetic tree to be known. In practice, there are only one or more hypotheses as to the correct tree. Different hypotheses lead to different organisms being thought to be included in the named taxon, but do not affect what organisms the name actually applies to. In this sense the name is independent of theory revision.[citation needed]

Phylogenetic definitions of clade names edit

Phylogenetic nomenclature ties names to clades, groups consisting solely of an ancestor and all its descendants. All that is needed to specify a clade, therefore, is to designate the ancestor. There are a number of ways of doing this. Commonly, the ancestor is indicated by its relation to two or more specifiers (species, specimens, or traits) that are mentioned explicitly. The diagram shows three common ways of doing this. For previously defined clades A, B, and C, the clade X can be defined as:

 
The three most common ways to define the name of a clade: node-based, branch-based and apomorphy-based definition. The tree represents a phylogenetic hypothesis on the relations of A, B and C.
  • A node-based definition could read: "the last common ancestor of A and B, and all descendants of that ancestor". Thus, the entire line below the junction of A and B does not belong to the clade to which the name with this definition refers. A crown group is a type of node-based group where A and B are extant (living) taxa.
Example: The sauropod dinosaurs consist of the last common ancestor of Vulcanodon (A) and Apatosaurus (B)[2] and all of that ancestor's descendants. This ancestor was the first sauropod. C could include other dinosaurs like Stegosaurus.
  • A branch-based definition, often called a stem-based definition, could read: "the first ancestor of A which is not also an ancestor of C, and all descendants of that ancestor". Thus, the entire line below the junction of A and B (other than the bottommost point) does belong to the clade to which the name with this definition refers. A pan-group or total group is a type of branch-based group where A and C are extant (living) taxa.
Example (also a total group): The rodents consist of the first ancestor of the house mouse (A) that is not also an ancestor of the eastern cottontail rabbit (C) together with all descendants of that ancestor. Here, the ancestor of A (but not C) is the very first rodent. B is some other descendant of that first rodent, perhaps the red squirrel.
  • An apomorphy-based definition could read: "the first ancestor of A to possess trait M that is inherited by A, and all descendants of that ancestor". In the diagram, M evolves at the intersection of the horizontal line with the tree. Thus, the clade to which the name with this definition refers contains that part of the line below the last common ancestor of A and B which corresponds to ancestors possessing the apomorphy M. The lower part of the line is excluded. It is not required that B have trait M; it may have disappeared in the lineage leading to B.
Example: the tetrapods consist of the first ancestor of humans (A) from which humans inherited limbs with fingers or toes (M) and all descendants of that ancestor. These descendants include snakes (B), which do not have limbs.

Several other alternatives are provided in the PhyloCode,[3] (see below) though there is no attempt to be exhaustive.

Phylogenetic nomenclature allows the use, not only of ancestral relations, but also of the property of being extant. One of the many ways of specifying the Neornithes (modern birds), for example, is:

The Neornithes consist of the last common ancestor of the extant members of the most inclusive clade containing the cockatoo Cacatua galerita but not the dinosaur Stegosaurus armatus as well as all descendants of that ancestor.

Neornithes is a crown clade, a clade for which the last common ancestor of its extant members is also the last common ancestor of all its members.

Node names edit

  • Crown node: Most recent common ancestor of the sampled species of the clade of interest
  • Stem node: Most recent common ancestor of the clade of interest and its sister clade

Ancestry-based definitions of the names of paraphyletic and polyphyletic taxa edit

In the PhyloCode, only a clade can receive a "phylogenetic definition", and this restriction is observed in the present article. However, it is also possible to create definitions for the names of other groups that are phylogenetic in the sense that they use only ancestral relations anchored on species or specimens.[4] For example, assuming Mammalia and Aves (birds) are defined in this manner, Amniotes could be defined as "the most recent common ancestor of Mammalia and Aves and all its descendants except Mammalia and Aves". This is an example of a paraphyletic group, a clade minus one or more subordinate clades. Names of polyphyletic groups, characterized by a trait that evolved convergently in two or more subgroups, can similarly be defined as the sum of multiple clades.[4]

Ranks edit

Under the traditional nomenclature codes, such as the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature and the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants, taxa that are not explicitly associated with a rank cannot be formally named, because the application of a name to a taxon is based on both a type and a rank. The requirement for a rank is a major difference between traditional and phylogenetic nomenclature. It has several consequences: it limits the number of nested levels at which names can be applied; it causes the endings of names to change if a group has its rank changed, even if it has precisely the same members (i.e. the same circumscription); and it is logically inconsistent with all taxa being monophyletic.

Especially in recent decades (due to advances in phylogenetics), taxonomists have named many "nested" taxa (i.e. taxa which are contained inside other taxa). No system of nomenclature attempts to name every clade; this would be particularly difficult in traditional nomenclature since every named taxon must be given a lower rank than any named taxon in which it is nested, so the number of names that can be assigned in a nested set of taxa can be no greater than the number of generally recognized ranks. Gauthier et al. (1988)[5] suggested that, if Reptilia is assigned its traditional rank of class, then a phylogenetic classification has to assign the rank of genus to Aves.[6] In such a classification, all ~12,000 known species of extant and extinct birds would then have to be incorporated into this genus.

Various solutions have been proposed while keeping the rank-based nomenclature codes. Patterson and Rosen (1977)[7] suggested nine new ranks between family and superfamily in order to be able to classify a clade of herrings, and McKenna and Bell (1997)[8] introduced a large array of new ranks in order to cope with the diversity of Mammalia; these have not been widely adopted. In botany, the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group, responsible for the currently most widely used classification of flowering plants, chose a different approach. They retained the traditional ranks of family and order, considering them to be of value in teaching and in studying relationships between taxa, but also introduced named clades without formal ranks.[9]

The current codes also have rules stating that names must have certain endings depending on the rank of the taxa to which they are applied. When a group has a different rank in different classifications, its name must have a different suffix. Ereshefsky (1997:512)[6] gave an example. He noted that Simpson in 1963 and Wiley in 1981 agreed that the same group of genera, which included the genus Homo, should be placed together in a taxon. Simpson treated this taxon as a family, and so gave it the name "Hominidae": "Homin-" from "Homo" and "-idae" as the family ending under the zoological code. Wiley considered it to be at the rank of tribe, and so gave it the name "Hominini", "-ini" being the tribe ending. Wiley's tribe Hominini formed only part of a family which he called "Hominidae". Thus, under the zoological code, two groups with precisely the same circumscription were given different names (Simpson's Hominidae and Wiley's Hominini) and two groups with the same name had different circumscriptions (Simpson's Hominidae and Wiley's Hominidae).

In phylogenetic nomenclature, ranks have no bearing on the spelling of taxon names (see e.g. Gauthier (1994)[10] and the PhyloCode). Ranks are, however, not altogether forbidden in phylogenetic nomenclature. They are merely decoupled from nomenclature: they do not influence which names can be used, which taxa are associated with which names, and which names can refer to nested taxa.[11][12][13]

The principles of traditional rank-based nomenclature are logically incompatible with all taxa being strictly monophyletic.[11][14] Every organism must belong to a genus, for example, so there would have to be a genus for every common ancestor of the mammals and the birds. For such a genus to be monophyletic, it would have to include both the class Mammalia and the class Aves. In rank-based nomenclature, however, classes must include genera, not the other way around.

Philosophy edit

The conflict between phylogenetic and traditional nomenclature reflects differing views of the metaphysics and epistemology of taxa. For the advocates of phylogenetic nomenclature, a taxon is an individual, an entity that gains and loses attributes as time passes.[15] Just as a person does not become somebody else when his or her properties change through maturation, senility, or more radical changes like amnesia, the loss of a limb, or a change in sex, so a taxon remains the same entity whatever characteristics are gained or lost.[16] Given the strong metaphysical claims regarding unobservable entities made by advocates of phylogenetic nomenclature, critics have referred to their approach as origin essentialism. [17][18]

For any individual, there has to be something that connects its temporal stages in virtue of which it remains the same thing. For a person, the spatiotemporal continuity of the body provides the relevant connection; from infancy to old age, the body traces a continuous path through the world and it is this path, rather than any characteristics of the individual, that connects the baby and the octogenarian.[19] This is similar to the well-known philosophical problem of the Ship of Theseus. For a taxon, IF characteristics are not relevant, THEN it can only be ancestral relations that connect the Devonian Rhyniognatha hirsti with the modern monarch butterfly as representatives, separated by 400 million years, of the taxon Insecta.[16] The opposing camp questions the premise of that syllogism, and argues, from an epistemological perspective, that members of taxa are only empirically recognizable on the basis of their characters, and hypotheses of common ancestry are results of systematics, not a priori premises. If there are no characters that allow scientists to recognize a fossil as belonging to a taxonomic group, then it is just an unclassifiable piece of rock.[20]

If ancestry is sufficient for the continuity of a taxon, then all descendants of a taxon member will also be included in the taxon, so all bona fide taxa are monophyletic; the names of paraphyletic groups do not merit formal recognition. As "Pelycosauria" refers to a paraphyletic group that includes some Permian tetrapods but not their extant descendants, it cannot be admitted as a valid taxon name. Again, while not disagreeing with the notion that only monophyletic groups should be named, empiricist systematists counter this ancestry essentialism by pointing out that pelycosaurs are recognized as paraphyletic precisely because they exhibit a combination of synapomorphies and symplesiomorphies indicating that some of them are more closely related to mammals than they are to other pelycosaurs. The material existence of an assemblage of fossils and its status as a clade are not the same issue. Monophyletic groups are worthy of attention and naming because they share properties of interest -- synapomorphies -- that are the evidence that allows inference of common ancestry.[21]

History edit

 
"Monophyletic phylogenetic tree of organisms".[22]

Phylogenetic nomenclature is a semantic extension of the general acceptance of branching in the course of evolution, represented in the diagrams of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and later writers like Charles Darwin and Ernst Haeckel.[23][24] In 1866, Haeckel for the first time constructed a single tree of all life based on the existing classification of life accepted at the time. This classification was rank-based, but did not contain taxa that Haeckel considered polyphyletic. In it, Haeckel introduced the rank of phylum which carries a connotation of monophyly in its name (literally meaning "stem").[citation needed]

Ever since, it has been debated in which ways and to what extent the understanding of the phylogeny of life should be used as a basis for its classification, with views ranging from "numerical taxonomy" (phenetics) over "evolutionary taxonomy" (gradistics) to "phylogenetic systematics". From the 1960s onwards, rankless classifications were occasionally proposed, but in general the principles and common language of traditional nomenclature have been used by all three schools of thought.[citation needed]

Most of the basic tenets of phylogenetic nomenclature (lack of obligatory ranks, and something close to phylogenetic definitions) can, however, be traced to 1916, when Edwin Goodrich[25] interpreted the name Sauropsida, erected 40 years earlier by T. H. Huxley, to include the birds (Aves) as well as part of Reptilia, and coined the new name Theropsida to include the mammals as well as another part of Reptilia. As these taxa exist above the levels traditionally governed by the rules of zoological nomenclature, Goodrich did not emphasize ranks, but he clearly discussed the diagnostic features necessary to recognize and classify fossils belonging to the various groups. For example, in regard to the fifth metatarsal of the hind leg, he said "the facts support our view, for these early reptiles have normal metatarsals like their Amphibian ancestors. It is clear, then, that we have here a valuable corroborative character to help us to decide whether a given species belongs to the Theropsidan or the Sauropsidan line of evolution." Goodrich concluded his paper: "The possession of these characters shows that all living Reptilia belong to the Sauropsidan group, while the structure of the foot enables us to determine the affinities of many incompletely known fossil genera, and to conclude that only certain extinct orders can belong to the Theropsidan branch." Goodrich opined that the name Reptilia should be abandoned once the phylogeny of the reptiles was better known.[citation needed]

The principle that only clades should be formally named became popular in some circles in the second half of the 20th century. It spread together with the methods for discovering clades (cladistics) and is an integral part of phylogenetic systematics (see above). At the same time, it became apparent that the obligatory ranks that are part of the traditional systems of nomenclature produced problems. Some authors suggested abandoning them altogether, starting with Willi Hennig's abandonment[26] of his earlier proposal to define ranks as geological age classes.[27][28]

The first use of phylogenetic nomenclature in a publication can be dated to 1986.[29] Theoretical papers outlining the principles of phylogenetic nomenclature, as well as further publications containing applications of phylogenetic nomenclature (mostly to vertebrates), soon followed (see Literature section).

In an attempt to avoid a schism in the systematic community, "Gauthier suggested to two members of the ICZN to apply formal taxonomic names ruled by the zoological code only to clades (at least for supraspecific taxa) and to abandon Linnean ranks, but these two members promptly rejected these ideas".[30] The premise of names in traditional nomenclature is based, ultimately, on type specimens, and the circumscription of groups is considered a taxonomic choice made by the systematists working on particular groups, rather than a nomenclatural decision made based on a priori rules in the Codes on Nomenclature.[31] The desire to subsume taxonomic circumscriptions within nomenclatural definitions led Kevin de Queiroz and the botanist Philip Cantino to start drafting their own code of nomenclature, the PhyloCode, to regulate phylogenetic nomenclature.[citation needed]

Controversy edit

Willi Hennig's pioneering work provoked a spirited debate[32] about the relative merits of phylogenetic nomenclature versus Linnaean taxonomy, or the related approach of evolutionary taxonomy, which has continued down to the present.[33] Some of the debates in which the cladists were engaged had been running since the 19th century.[34] While Hennig insisted that different classification schemes were useful for different purposes,[35] he gave primacy to his own, claiming that the categories of his system had "individuality and reality" in contrast to the "timeless abstractions" of morphology-based classifications.[36]

Formal classifications based on cladistic reasoning are said to emphasize ancestry at the expense of descriptive characteristics. Nonetheless, most taxonomists today avoid paraphyletic groups whenever they think it is possible within Linnaean taxonomy; polyphyletic taxa have long fallen out of fashion. Many cladists hold that the traditional Codes of Zoological and Botanical Nomenclature are fully compatible with cladistic approaches, and that there is no need to reinvent a system of names that has functioned well for 250 years,[37][38][39] but others argue that this system is not as effective as it should be and that it is time to adopt nomenclatural principles that reflect divergent evolution as a mechanism that explains much of the known biodiversity.[40][41]

The International Code of Phylogenetic Nomenclature edit

The ICPN, or PhyloCode, is a code of rules and recommendations for phylogenetic nomenclature.

  • The ICPN only regulates clade names. Names for species rely on the rules of the traditional codes of nomenclature.
  • The Principle of Priority (or "precedence") is claimed for names and for definitions within the ICPN. The starting point for priority was April 30, 2020.
  • Definitions for existing names, and new names along with their definitions, must be published in peer-reviewed works (on or after the starting date) and must be registered in an online database in order to be valid.

The number of supporters for widespread adoption of the PhyloCode is still small, and it is uncertain how widely it will be followed.

References edit

  1. ^ International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (1999). "Glossary". International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (4th ed.). International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature, c/o Natural History Museum. ISBN 978-0-85301-006-7.
  2. ^ Benton, Michael J. (2005). Vertebrate Palaeontology. Blackwell. p. 214. ISBN 978-0-632-05637-8.
  3. ^ Cantino, Philip D. & de Queiroz, Kevin (2010). "Article 9. General Requirements for Establishment of Clade Names". International Code of Phylogenetic Nomenclature. 4c. note 9.3.1..
  4. ^ a b de Queiroz, K.; Gauthier, J. (1990). "Phylogeny as a central principle in taxonomy: phylogenetic definitions of taxon names". Systematic Zoology. 39 (4): 307–322. doi:10.2307/2992353. JSTOR 2992353.
  5. ^ Gauthier, J., Estes, R. & de Queiroz, K. 1988. A Phylogenetic Analysis of Lepidosauromorpha. Pp. 15–98 in R. Estes & G. Pregill (eds): Phylogenetic Relationships of the Lizard Families: Essays Commemorating Charles L. Camp. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-1435-8
  6. ^ a b Ereshefsky, M. (1997). "The Evolution of the Linnaean Hierarchy". Biology and Philosophy. 12 (4): 493–519. doi:10.1023/A:1006556627052. S2CID 83251018.
  7. ^ Patterson, C. & Rosen, D. 1977 Review of ichthyodectiform and other Mesozoic teleost fishes and the theory and practice of classifying fossils. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 158: 81–172.
  8. ^ McKenna, M. C. & Bell, S. K. 1997. Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-11012-X
  9. ^ Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (1998). "An ordinal classification for the families of flowering plants". Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden. 85 (4): 531–553. doi:10.2307/2992015. JSTOR 2992015. S2CID 82134384.
  10. ^ Gauthier, J. A. (1994). "The diversification of the amniotes". In D. R. Prothero; Rainer R. Schoch (eds.). Major features of vertebrate evolution. Paleontological Society. pp. 129–159.
  11. ^ a b de Queiroz, K.; Gauthier, J. (1992). "Phylogenetic taxonomy". Annu. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 23: 449–480. doi:10.1146/annurev.es.23.110192.002313.
  12. ^ Cantino, P. D. (2000). "Phylogenetic nomenclature: addressing some concerns". Taxon. 49 (1): 85–93. doi:10.2307/1223935. JSTOR 1223935.
  13. ^ Bryant, H. N.; Cantino, P. D. (2002). "A review of criticisms of phylogenetic nomenclature: is taxonomic freedom the fundamental issue?". Biol. Rev. 77 (1): 39–55. doi:10.1017/S1464793101005802. PMID 11911373. S2CID 20518066.
  14. ^ Kazlev, M. A. . palaeos.com. Archived from the original on July 10, 2017. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  15. ^ Assis, L. C. S.; Brigandt, I. (2009). "Homology: Homeostatic Property Cluster Kinds in Systematics and Evolution" (PDF). Evolutionary Biology. 36 (2): 248–255. doi:10.1007/s11692-009-9054-y. S2CID 363300.[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ a b Rowe, Timothy (1988). "Definition, diagnosis, and origin of Mammalia" (PDF). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 8 (3): 241–264. doi:10.1080/02724634.1988.10011708.
  17. ^ Winsor, Mary P. (2009). "Taxonomy was the foundation of Darwin's evolution". Taxon. 58: 43–49. doi:10.1002/tax.581007.
  18. ^ Rieppel, Olivier (2010). "New essentiaism in biology". Philosophy of Science. 36 (5): 662–673. doi:10.1086/656539. S2CID 86958171.
  19. ^ Wiggins, David (1967). Identity and Spatio-temporal Continuity. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0631103707.
  20. ^ Brower, Andrew V.Z. (2016). "Tree-thinking". Inference. 2.
  21. ^ Hennig 1966, p. 93.
  22. ^ Haeckel, E. H. Ph. A. 1866. Generelle Morphologie der Organismen. Georg Reimer.
  23. ^ Ragan, Mark A. (2009). "Trees and networks before and after Darwin". Biology Direct. 4 (43): 43. doi:10.1186/1745-6150-4-43. PMC 2793248. PMID 19917100.
  24. ^ Tassy, Pascal (May 2011). "Trees before and after Darwin: Trees before and after Darwin". Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 49 (2): 89–101. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0469.2010.00585.x.
  25. ^ Goodrich, E. S. (1916). "On the classification of the Reptilia". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 89 (615): 261–276. Bibcode:1916RSPSB..89..261G. doi:10.1098/rspb.1916.0012.
  26. ^ Hennig, W. 1969. Die Stammesgeschichte der Insekten. Waldemar Kramer.
  27. ^ Hennig, W. 1950. Grundzüge einer Theorie der phylogenetischen Systematik. Deutscher Zentralverlag.
  28. ^ Hennig, W. (1965). "Phylogenetic Systematics". Annual Review of Entomology. 10: 97–116. doi:10.1146/annurev.en.10.010165.000525.
  29. ^ Gauthier, J. (1986). "Saurischian Monophyly and the Origin of Birds". In K. Padian (ed.). The Origin of Birds and the Evolution of Flight. Memoir 8 of the California Academy of Sciences. pp. 1–55.
  30. ^ Laurin, M. (2008). "The splendid isolation of biological nomenclature". Zoologica Scripta. 37 (2): 223–233. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6409.2007.00318.x. S2CID 85020798.
  31. ^ Brower, Andrew V. Z. (2020). "Dead on arrival: a postmortem assessment of "phylogenetic nomenclature", 20+ years on". Cladistics. 37 (6): 627–637. doi:10.1111/cla.12432. S2CID 224927279.
  32. ^ Wheeler, Quentin (2000). Species Concepts and Phylogenetic Theory: A Debate. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-10143-1.
  33. ^ Benton, M. J. (2000). (PDF). Biological Reviews. 75 (4): 633–648. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.573.4518. doi:10.1111/j.1469-185X.2000.tb00055.x. PMID 11117201. S2CID 17851383. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-09. Retrieved 2011-08-26.
  34. ^ Hull, David (1988). Science as a Process. University of Chicago Press. pp. 232–276. ISBN 978-0-226-36051-5.
  35. ^ Hennig 1966, p. 9.
  36. ^ Hennig 1966, p. 81.
  37. ^ Nixon, Kevin C., and James M. Carpenter. "On the other “phylogenetic systematics”." Cladistics 16, no. 3 (2000): 298-318.
  38. ^ Schuh, Randall T. "The Linnaean system and its 250-year persistence." The Botanical Review 69, no. 1 (2003): 59.
  39. ^ Brower, Andrew VZ. "Dead on arrival: a postmortem assessment of “phylogenetic nomenclature”, 20+ years on." (2020) Cladistics 36(6):627-637.
  40. ^ Laurin, Michel (3 August 2023). The Advent of PhyloCode: The Continuing Evolution of Biological Nomenclature. CRC Press. doi:10.1201/9781003092827. ISBN 978-1-003-09282-7.
  41. ^ Laurin, Michel (23 July 2023). "The PhyloCode : The logical outcome of millennia of evolution of biological nomenclature?". Zoologica Scripta. 52 (6): 543–555. doi:10.1111/zsc.12625. ISSN 0300-3256.

Sources edit

  • Hennig, Willi (1966). Phylogenetic systematics. Translated by D. Dwight Davis; Rainer Zangerl. Urbana, IL: Univ. of Illinois Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-252-06814-0. (reprinted 1979 and 1999)

Further reading edit

A few publications not cited in the references are cited here. An exhaustive list of publications about phylogenetic nomenclature can be found on the website of the International Society for Phylogenetic Nomenclature.

  • Bryant, Harold N. (1994). "Comments on the phylogenetic definition of taxon names and conventions regarding the naming of crown clades". Syst. Biol. 43: 124–129. doi:10.1093/sysbio/43.1.124.
  • Cantino, Philip D.; Olmstead, Richard G. (2008). "Application of phylogenetically defined names does not require that every specifier be present on a tree". Syst. Biol. 57 (1): 157–160. doi:10.1080/10635150701883873. PMID 18300028.
  • de Queiroz, Kevin (1992). Phylogenetic definitions and taxonomic philosophy. Biol. Philos. 7:295–313.
  • Gauthier, Jacques A., Arnold G. Kluge, and Timothy Rowe (1988). The early evolution of the Amniota. Pages 103–155 in Michael J. Benton (ed.): The Phylogeny and Classification of the Tetrapods, Volume 1: Amphibians, Reptiles, Birds. Syst. Ass. Spec. Vol. 35A. Clarendon Press, Oxford.
  • Gauthier, Jacques, David Cannatella, Kevin de Queiroz, Arnold G. Kluge, and Timothy Rowe (1989). Tetrapod phylogeny. Pages 337–353 in B. Fernholm, K. Bremer, and H. Jörnvall (eds.): The Hierarchy of Life. Elsevier Science B. V. (Biomedical Division), New York.
  • Ghiselin, M. T. (1984). "Definition," "character," and other equivocal terms". Syst. Zool. 33 (1): 104–110. doi:10.2307/2413135. JSTOR 2413135.
  • Keesey, T. Michael (2007). "A mathematical approach to defining clade names, with potential applications to computer storage and processing". Zool. Scr. 36 (6): 607–621. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6409.2007.00302.x. S2CID 83862527.
  • Laurin, Michel (2005). The advantages of phylogenetic nomenclature over Linnean nomenclature. Pages 67–97 in A. Minelli, G. Ortalli, and G. Sanga (eds): Animal Names. Instituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti; Venice.
  • Lee, Michael S. Y. (2005). "Choosing reference taxa in phylogenetic nomenclature". Zool. Scr. 34 (3): 329–331. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6409.2005.00196.x. S2CID 86329828.
  • Rowe, Timothy (1987). "Definition and diagnosis in the phylogenetic system". Syst. Zool. 36 (2): 208–211. doi:10.2307/2413270. JSTOR 2413270.
  • Rowe, Timothy; Gauthier, Jacques (1992). "Ancestry, paleontology and definition of the name Mammalia". Syst. Biol. 41 (3): 372–378. doi:10.1093/sysbio/41.3.372. S2CID 86132781.
  • Sereno, Paul C. (1998). "A rationale for phylogenetic definitions, with application to the higher-level taxonomy of Dinosauria". Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Abhandlungen. 210: 41–83. doi:10.1127/njgpa/210/1998/41.
  • Sereno, Paul C. (1999). "Definitions in phylogenetic taxonomy: critique and rationale". Syst. Biol. 48 (2): 329–351. doi:10.1080/106351599260328. PMID 12066711.
  • Sereno, Paul C. (2005). "The Logical Basis of Phylogenetic Taxonomy". Syst. Biol. 54 (4): 595–619. doi:10.1080/106351591007453. PMID 16109704.
  • Taylor, Michael P. (2007). "Phylogenetic definitions in the pre-PhyloCode era; implications for naming clades under the PhyloCode". PaleoBios. 27: 1–6.
  • Wilkinson, Mark (2006). "Identifying stable reference taxa for phylogenetic nomenclature". Zool. Scr. 35: 109–112. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6409.2005.00213.x. S2CID 85702468.
  • Wyss, A. R.; Meng, J. (1996). "Application of phylogenetic taxonomy to poorly resolved crown clades: a stem-modified node-based definition of Rodentia". Syst. Biol. 45 (4): 559–568. doi:10.1093/sysbio/45.4.559.

phylogenetic, nomenclature, method, nomenclature, taxa, biology, that, uses, phylogenetic, definitions, taxon, names, explained, below, this, contrasts, with, traditional, approach, which, taxon, names, defined, type, which, specimen, taxon, lower, rank, descr. Phylogenetic nomenclature is a method of nomenclature for taxa in biology that uses phylogenetic definitions for taxon names as explained below This contrasts with the traditional approach in which taxon names are defined by a type which can be a specimen or a taxon of lower rank and a description in words 1 Phylogenetic nomenclature is currently regulated by the International Code of Phylogenetic Nomenclature PhyloCode The clade shown by the dashed lines in each figure is specified by the ancestor X Under the hypothesis that the relationships are as in the left tree the clade includes X A B and C Under the hypothesis that the relationships are as in the right tree the clade includes X A and B Contents 1 Definitions 1 1 Phylogenetic definitions of clade names 1 2 Node names 1 3 Ancestry based definitions of the names of paraphyletic and polyphyletic taxa 2 Ranks 3 Philosophy 4 History 5 Controversy 6 The International Code of Phylogenetic Nomenclature 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 Further readingDefinitions editPhylogenetic nomenclature ties names to clades groups consisting of an ancestor and all its descendants These groups can equivalently be called monophyletic There are slightly different ways of specifying the ancestor which are discussed below Once the ancestor is specified the meaning of the name is fixed the ancestor and all organisms which are its descendants are included in the named taxon Listing all these organisms i e providing a full circumscription requires the full phylogenetic tree to be known In practice there are only one or more hypotheses as to the correct tree Different hypotheses lead to different organisms being thought to be included in the named taxon but do not affect what organisms the name actually applies to In this sense the name is independent of theory revision citation needed Phylogenetic definitions of clade names edit Phylogenetic nomenclature ties names to clades groups consisting solely of an ancestor and all its descendants All that is needed to specify a clade therefore is to designate the ancestor There are a number of ways of doing this Commonly the ancestor is indicated by its relation to two or more specifiers species specimens or traits that are mentioned explicitly The diagram shows three common ways of doing this For previously defined clades A B and C the clade X can be defined as nbsp The three most common ways to define the name of a clade node based branch based and apomorphy based definition The tree represents a phylogenetic hypothesis on the relations of A B and C A node based definition could read the last common ancestor of A and B and all descendants of that ancestor Thus the entire line below the junction of A and B does not belong to the clade to which the name with this definition refers A crown group is a type of node based group where A and B are extant living taxa Example The sauropod dinosaurs consist of the last common ancestor of Vulcanodon A and Apatosaurus B 2 and all of that ancestor s descendants This ancestor was the first sauropod C could include other dinosaurs like Stegosaurus dd A branch based definition often called a stem based definition could read the first ancestor of A which is not also an ancestor of C and all descendants of that ancestor Thus the entire line below the junction of A and B other than the bottommost point does belong to the clade to which the name with this definition refers A pan group or total group is a type of branch based group where A and C are extant living taxa Example also a total group The rodents consist of the first ancestor of the house mouse A that is not also an ancestor of the eastern cottontail rabbit C together with all descendants of that ancestor Here the ancestor of A but not C is the very first rodent B is some other descendant of that first rodent perhaps the red squirrel dd An apomorphy based definition could read the first ancestor of A to possess trait M that is inherited by A and all descendants of that ancestor In the diagram M evolves at the intersection of the horizontal line with the tree Thus the clade to which the name with this definition refers contains that part of the line below the last common ancestor of A and B which corresponds to ancestors possessing the apomorphy M The lower part of the line is excluded It is not required that B have trait M it may have disappeared in the lineage leading to B Example the tetrapods consist of the first ancestor of humans A from which humans inherited limbs with fingers or toes M and all descendants of that ancestor These descendants include snakes B which do not have limbs dd Several other alternatives are provided in the PhyloCode 3 see below though there is no attempt to be exhaustive Phylogenetic nomenclature allows the use not only of ancestral relations but also of the property of being extant One of the many ways of specifying the Neornithes modern birds for example is The Neornithes consist of the last common ancestor of the extant members of the most inclusive clade containing the cockatoo Cacatua galerita but not the dinosaur Stegosaurus armatus as well as all descendants of that ancestor dd dd Neornithes is a crown clade a clade for which the last common ancestor of its extant members is also the last common ancestor of all its members Node names edit Crown node Most recent common ancestor of the sampled species of the clade of interest Stem node Most recent common ancestor of the clade of interest and its sister cladeAncestry based definitions of the names of paraphyletic and polyphyletic taxa edit In the PhyloCode only a clade can receive a phylogenetic definition and this restriction is observed in the present article However it is also possible to create definitions for the names of other groups that are phylogenetic in the sense that they use only ancestral relations anchored on species or specimens 4 For example assuming Mammalia and Aves birds are defined in this manner Amniotes could be defined as the most recent common ancestor of Mammalia and Aves and all its descendants except Mammalia and Aves This is an example of a paraphyletic group a clade minus one or more subordinate clades Names of polyphyletic groups characterized by a trait that evolved convergently in two or more subgroups can similarly be defined as the sum of multiple clades 4 Ranks editUnder the traditional nomenclature codes such as the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature and the International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants taxa that are not explicitly associated with a rank cannot be formally named because the application of a name to a taxon is based on both a type and a rank The requirement for a rank is a major difference between traditional and phylogenetic nomenclature It has several consequences it limits the number of nested levels at which names can be applied it causes the endings of names to change if a group has its rank changed even if it has precisely the same members i e the same circumscription and it is logically inconsistent with all taxa being monophyletic Especially in recent decades due to advances in phylogenetics taxonomists have named many nested taxa i e taxa which are contained inside other taxa No system of nomenclature attempts to name every clade this would be particularly difficult in traditional nomenclature since every named taxon must be given a lower rank than any named taxon in which it is nested so the number of names that can be assigned in a nested set of taxa can be no greater than the number of generally recognized ranks Gauthier et al 1988 5 suggested that if Reptilia is assigned its traditional rank of class then a phylogenetic classification has to assign the rank of genus to Aves 6 In such a classification all 12 000 known species of extant and extinct birds would then have to be incorporated into this genus Various solutions have been proposed while keeping the rank based nomenclature codes Patterson and Rosen 1977 7 suggested nine new ranks between family and superfamily in order to be able to classify a clade of herrings and McKenna and Bell 1997 8 introduced a large array of new ranks in order to cope with the diversity of Mammalia these have not been widely adopted In botany the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group responsible for the currently most widely used classification of flowering plants chose a different approach They retained the traditional ranks of family and order considering them to be of value in teaching and in studying relationships between taxa but also introduced named clades without formal ranks 9 The current codes also have rules stating that names must have certain endings depending on the rank of the taxa to which they are applied When a group has a different rank in different classifications its name must have a different suffix Ereshefsky 1997 512 6 gave an example He noted that Simpson in 1963 and Wiley in 1981 agreed that the same group of genera which included the genus Homo should be placed together in a taxon Simpson treated this taxon as a family and so gave it the name Hominidae Homin from Homo and idae as the family ending under the zoological code Wiley considered it to be at the rank of tribe and so gave it the name Hominini ini being the tribe ending Wiley s tribe Hominini formed only part of a family which he called Hominidae Thus under the zoological code two groups with precisely the same circumscription were given different names Simpson s Hominidae and Wiley s Hominini and two groups with the same name had different circumscriptions Simpson s Hominidae and Wiley s Hominidae In phylogenetic nomenclature ranks have no bearing on the spelling of taxon names see e g Gauthier 1994 10 and the PhyloCode Ranks are however not altogether forbidden in phylogenetic nomenclature They are merely decoupled from nomenclature they do not influence which names can be used which taxa are associated with which names and which names can refer to nested taxa 11 12 13 The principles of traditional rank based nomenclature are logically incompatible with all taxa being strictly monophyletic 11 14 Every organism must belong to a genus for example so there would have to be a genus for every common ancestor of the mammals and the birds For such a genus to be monophyletic it would have to include both the class Mammalia and the class Aves In rank based nomenclature however classes must include genera not the other way around Philosophy editThe conflict between phylogenetic and traditional nomenclature reflects differing views of the metaphysics and epistemology of taxa For the advocates of phylogenetic nomenclature a taxon is an individual an entity that gains and loses attributes as time passes 15 Just as a person does not become somebody else when his or her properties change through maturation senility or more radical changes like amnesia the loss of a limb or a change in sex so a taxon remains the same entity whatever characteristics are gained or lost 16 Given the strong metaphysical claims regarding unobservable entities made by advocates of phylogenetic nomenclature critics have referred to their approach as origin essentialism 17 18 For any individual there has to be something that connects its temporal stages in virtue of which it remains the same thing For a person the spatiotemporal continuity of the body provides the relevant connection from infancy to old age the body traces a continuous path through the world and it is this path rather than any characteristics of the individual that connects the baby and the octogenarian 19 This is similar to the well known philosophical problem of the Ship of Theseus For a taxon IF characteristics are not relevant THEN it can only be ancestral relations that connect the Devonian Rhyniognatha hirsti with the modern monarch butterfly as representatives separated by 400 million years of the taxon Insecta 16 The opposing camp questions the premise of that syllogism and argues from an epistemological perspective that members of taxa are only empirically recognizable on the basis of their characters and hypotheses of common ancestry are results of systematics not a priori premises If there are no characters that allow scientists to recognize a fossil as belonging to a taxonomic group then it is just an unclassifiable piece of rock 20 If ancestry is sufficient for the continuity of a taxon then all descendants of a taxon member will also be included in the taxon so all bona fide taxa are monophyletic the names of paraphyletic groups do not merit formal recognition As Pelycosauria refers to a paraphyletic group that includes some Permian tetrapods but not their extant descendants it cannot be admitted as a valid taxon name Again while not disagreeing with the notion that only monophyletic groups should be named empiricist systematists counter this ancestry essentialism by pointing out that pelycosaurs are recognized as paraphyletic precisely because they exhibit a combination of synapomorphies and symplesiomorphies indicating that some of them are more closely related to mammals than they are to other pelycosaurs The material existence of an assemblage of fossils and its status as a clade are not the same issue Monophyletic groups are worthy of attention and naming because they share properties of interest synapomorphies that are the evidence that allows inference of common ancestry 21 History edit nbsp Monophyletic phylogenetic tree of organisms 22 Phylogenetic nomenclature is a semantic extension of the general acceptance of branching in the course of evolution represented in the diagrams of Jean Baptiste Lamarck and later writers like Charles Darwin and Ernst Haeckel 23 24 In 1866 Haeckel for the first time constructed a single tree of all life based on the existing classification of life accepted at the time This classification was rank based but did not contain taxa that Haeckel considered polyphyletic In it Haeckel introduced the rank of phylum which carries a connotation of monophyly in its name literally meaning stem citation needed Ever since it has been debated in which ways and to what extent the understanding of the phylogeny of life should be used as a basis for its classification with views ranging from numerical taxonomy phenetics over evolutionary taxonomy gradistics to phylogenetic systematics From the 1960s onwards rankless classifications were occasionally proposed but in general the principles and common language of traditional nomenclature have been used by all three schools of thought citation needed Most of the basic tenets of phylogenetic nomenclature lack of obligatory ranks and something close to phylogenetic definitions can however be traced to 1916 when Edwin Goodrich 25 interpreted the name Sauropsida erected 40 years earlier by T H Huxley to include the birds Aves as well as part of Reptilia and coined the new name Theropsida to include the mammals as well as another part of Reptilia As these taxa exist above the levels traditionally governed by the rules of zoological nomenclature Goodrich did not emphasize ranks but he clearly discussed the diagnostic features necessary to recognize and classify fossils belonging to the various groups For example in regard to the fifth metatarsal of the hind leg he said the facts support our view for these early reptiles have normal metatarsals like their Amphibian ancestors It is clear then that we have here a valuable corroborative character to help us to decide whether a given species belongs to the Theropsidan or the Sauropsidan line of evolution Goodrich concluded his paper The possession of these characters shows that all living Reptilia belong to the Sauropsidan group while the structure of the foot enables us to determine the affinities of many incompletely known fossil genera and to conclude that only certain extinct orders can belong to the Theropsidan branch Goodrich opined that the name Reptilia should be abandoned once the phylogeny of the reptiles was better known citation needed The principle that only clades should be formally named became popular in some circles in the second half of the 20th century It spread together with the methods for discovering clades cladistics and is an integral part of phylogenetic systematics see above At the same time it became apparent that the obligatory ranks that are part of the traditional systems of nomenclature produced problems Some authors suggested abandoning them altogether starting with Willi Hennig s abandonment 26 of his earlier proposal to define ranks as geological age classes 27 28 The first use of phylogenetic nomenclature in a publication can be dated to 1986 29 Theoretical papers outlining the principles of phylogenetic nomenclature as well as further publications containing applications of phylogenetic nomenclature mostly to vertebrates soon followed see Literature section In an attempt to avoid a schism in the systematic community Gauthier suggested to two members of the ICZN to apply formal taxonomic names ruled by the zoological code only to clades at least for supraspecific taxa and to abandon Linnean ranks but these two members promptly rejected these ideas 30 The premise of names in traditional nomenclature is based ultimately on type specimens and the circumscription of groups is considered a taxonomic choice made by the systematists working on particular groups rather than a nomenclatural decision made based on a priori rules in the Codes on Nomenclature 31 The desire to subsume taxonomic circumscriptions within nomenclatural definitions led Kevin de Queiroz and the botanist Philip Cantino to start drafting their own code of nomenclature the PhyloCode to regulate phylogenetic nomenclature citation needed Controversy editWilli Hennig s pioneering work provoked a spirited debate 32 about the relative merits of phylogenetic nomenclature versus Linnaean taxonomy or the related approach of evolutionary taxonomy which has continued down to the present 33 Some of the debates in which the cladists were engaged had been running since the 19th century 34 While Hennig insisted that different classification schemes were useful for different purposes 35 he gave primacy to his own claiming that the categories of his system had individuality and reality in contrast to the timeless abstractions of morphology based classifications 36 Formal classifications based on cladistic reasoning are said to emphasize ancestry at the expense of descriptive characteristics Nonetheless most taxonomists today avoid paraphyletic groups whenever they think it is possible within Linnaean taxonomy polyphyletic taxa have long fallen out of fashion Many cladists hold that the traditional Codes of Zoological and Botanical Nomenclature are fully compatible with cladistic approaches and that there is no need to reinvent a system of names that has functioned well for 250 years 37 38 39 but others argue that this system is not as effective as it should be and that it is time to adopt nomenclatural principles that reflect divergent evolution as a mechanism that explains much of the known biodiversity 40 41 The International Code of Phylogenetic Nomenclature editMain article PhyloCode The ICPN or PhyloCode is a code of rules and recommendations for phylogenetic nomenclature The ICPN only regulates clade names Names for species rely on the rules of the traditional codes of nomenclature The Principle of Priority or precedence is claimed for names and for definitions within the ICPN The starting point for priority was April 30 2020 Definitions for existing names and new names along with their definitions must be published in peer reviewed works on or after the starting date and must be registered in an online database in order to be valid The number of supporters for widespread adoption of the PhyloCode is still small and it is uncertain how widely it will be followed References edit International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 1999 Glossary International Code of Zoological Nomenclature 4th ed International Trust for Zoological Nomenclature c o Natural History Museum ISBN 978 0 85301 006 7 Benton Michael J 2005 Vertebrate Palaeontology Blackwell p 214 ISBN 978 0 632 05637 8 Cantino Philip D amp de Queiroz Kevin 2010 Article 9 General Requirements for Establishment of Clade Names International Code of Phylogenetic Nomenclature 4c note 9 3 1 a b de Queiroz K Gauthier J 1990 Phylogeny as a central principle in taxonomy phylogenetic definitions of taxon names Systematic Zoology 39 4 307 322 doi 10 2307 2992353 JSTOR 2992353 Gauthier J Estes R amp de Queiroz K 1988 A Phylogenetic Analysis of Lepidosauromorpha Pp 15 98 in R Estes amp G Pregill eds Phylogenetic Relationships of the Lizard Families Essays Commemorating Charles L Camp Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 1435 8 a b Ereshefsky M 1997 The Evolution of the Linnaean Hierarchy Biology and Philosophy 12 4 493 519 doi 10 1023 A 1006556627052 S2CID 83251018 Patterson C amp Rosen D 1977 Review of ichthyodectiform and other Mesozoic teleost fishes and the theory and practice of classifying fossils Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 158 81 172 McKenna M C amp Bell S K 1997 Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 11012 X Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998 An ordinal classification for the families of flowering plants Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 85 4 531 553 doi 10 2307 2992015 JSTOR 2992015 S2CID 82134384 Gauthier J A 1994 The diversification of the amniotes In D R Prothero Rainer R Schoch eds Major features of vertebrate evolution Paleontological Society pp 129 159 a b de Queiroz K Gauthier J 1992 Phylogenetic taxonomy Annu Rev Ecol Syst 23 449 480 doi 10 1146 annurev es 23 110192 002313 Cantino P D 2000 Phylogenetic nomenclature addressing some concerns Taxon 49 1 85 93 doi 10 2307 1223935 JSTOR 1223935 Bryant H N Cantino P D 2002 A review of criticisms of phylogenetic nomenclature is taxonomic freedom the fundamental issue Biol Rev 77 1 39 55 doi 10 1017 S1464793101005802 PMID 11911373 S2CID 20518066 Kazlev M A Cladistic and Linnaean systems incompatible or complementary palaeos com Archived from the original on July 10 2017 Retrieved September 30 2012 Assis L C S Brigandt I 2009 Homology Homeostatic Property Cluster Kinds in Systematics and Evolution PDF Evolutionary Biology 36 2 248 255 doi 10 1007 s11692 009 9054 y S2CID 363300 permanent dead link a b Rowe Timothy 1988 Definition diagnosis and origin of Mammalia PDF Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 8 3 241 264 doi 10 1080 02724634 1988 10011708 Winsor Mary P 2009 Taxonomy was the foundation of Darwin s evolution Taxon 58 43 49 doi 10 1002 tax 581007 Rieppel Olivier 2010 New essentiaism in biology Philosophy of Science 36 5 662 673 doi 10 1086 656539 S2CID 86958171 Wiggins David 1967 Identity and Spatio temporal Continuity Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0631103707 Brower Andrew V Z 2016 Tree thinking Inference 2 Hennig 1966 p 93 Haeckel E H Ph A 1866 Generelle Morphologie der Organismen Georg Reimer Ragan Mark A 2009 Trees and networks before and after Darwin Biology Direct 4 43 43 doi 10 1186 1745 6150 4 43 PMC 2793248 PMID 19917100 Tassy Pascal May 2011 Trees before and after Darwin Trees before and after Darwin Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 49 2 89 101 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0469 2010 00585 x Goodrich E S 1916 On the classification of the Reptilia Proceedings of the Royal Society B 89 615 261 276 Bibcode 1916RSPSB 89 261G doi 10 1098 rspb 1916 0012 Hennig W 1969 Die Stammesgeschichte der Insekten Waldemar Kramer Hennig W 1950 Grundzuge einer Theorie der phylogenetischen Systematik Deutscher Zentralverlag Hennig W 1965 Phylogenetic Systematics Annual Review of Entomology 10 97 116 doi 10 1146 annurev en 10 010165 000525 Gauthier J 1986 Saurischian Monophyly and the Origin of Birds In K Padian ed The Origin of Birds and the Evolution of Flight Memoir 8 of the California Academy of Sciences pp 1 55 Laurin M 2008 The splendid isolation of biological nomenclature Zoologica Scripta 37 2 223 233 doi 10 1111 j 1463 6409 2007 00318 x S2CID 85020798 Brower Andrew V Z 2020 Dead on arrival a postmortem assessment of phylogenetic nomenclature 20 years on Cladistics 37 6 627 637 doi 10 1111 cla 12432 S2CID 224927279 Wheeler Quentin 2000 Species Concepts and Phylogenetic Theory A Debate Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 10143 1 Benton M J 2000 Stems nodes crown clades and rank free lists is Linnaeus dead PDF Biological Reviews 75 4 633 648 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 573 4518 doi 10 1111 j 1469 185X 2000 tb00055 x PMID 11117201 S2CID 17851383 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 09 Retrieved 2011 08 26 Hull David 1988 Science as a Process University of Chicago Press pp 232 276 ISBN 978 0 226 36051 5 Hennig 1966 p 9 Hennig 1966 p 81 Nixon Kevin C and James M Carpenter On the other phylogenetic systematics Cladistics 16 no 3 2000 298 318 Schuh Randall T The Linnaean system and its 250 year persistence The Botanical Review 69 no 1 2003 59 Brower Andrew VZ Dead on arrival a postmortem assessment of phylogenetic nomenclature 20 years on 2020 Cladistics 36 6 627 637 Laurin Michel 3 August 2023 The Advent of PhyloCode The Continuing Evolution of Biological Nomenclature CRC Press doi 10 1201 9781003092827 ISBN 978 1 003 09282 7 Laurin Michel 23 July 2023 The PhyloCode The logical outcome of millennia of evolution of biological nomenclature Zoologica Scripta 52 6 543 555 doi 10 1111 zsc 12625 ISSN 0300 3256 Sources edit Hennig Willi 1966 Phylogenetic systematics Translated by D Dwight Davis Rainer Zangerl Urbana IL Univ of Illinois Press p 9 ISBN 978 0 252 06814 0 reprinted 1979 and 1999 Further reading editA few publications not cited in the references are cited here An exhaustive list of publications about phylogenetic nomenclature can be found on the website of the International Society for Phylogenetic Nomenclature Bryant Harold N 1994 Comments on the phylogenetic definition of taxon names and conventions regarding the naming of crown clades Syst Biol 43 124 129 doi 10 1093 sysbio 43 1 124 Cantino Philip D Olmstead Richard G 2008 Application of phylogenetically defined names does not require that every specifier be present on a tree Syst Biol 57 1 157 160 doi 10 1080 10635150701883873 PMID 18300028 de Queiroz Kevin 1992 Phylogenetic definitions and taxonomic philosophy Biol Philos 7 295 313 Gauthier Jacques A Arnold G Kluge and Timothy Rowe 1988 The early evolution of the Amniota Pages 103 155 in Michael J Benton ed The Phylogeny and Classification of the Tetrapods Volume 1 Amphibians Reptiles Birds Syst Ass Spec Vol 35A Clarendon Press Oxford Gauthier Jacques David Cannatella Kevin de Queiroz Arnold G Kluge and Timothy Rowe 1989 Tetrapod phylogeny Pages 337 353 in B Fernholm K Bremer and H Jornvall eds The Hierarchy of Life Elsevier Science B V Biomedical Division New York Ghiselin M T 1984 Definition character and other equivocal terms Syst Zool 33 1 104 110 doi 10 2307 2413135 JSTOR 2413135 Keesey T Michael 2007 A mathematical approach to defining clade names with potential applications to computer storage and processing Zool Scr 36 6 607 621 doi 10 1111 j 1463 6409 2007 00302 x S2CID 83862527 Laurin Michel 2005 The advantages of phylogenetic nomenclature over Linnean nomenclature Pages 67 97 in A Minelli G Ortalli and G Sanga eds Animal Names Instituto Veneto di Scienze Lettere ed Arti Venice Lee Michael S Y 2005 Choosing reference taxa in phylogenetic nomenclature Zool Scr 34 3 329 331 doi 10 1111 j 1463 6409 2005 00196 x S2CID 86329828 Rowe Timothy 1987 Definition and diagnosis in the phylogenetic system Syst Zool 36 2 208 211 doi 10 2307 2413270 JSTOR 2413270 Rowe Timothy Gauthier Jacques 1992 Ancestry paleontology and definition of the name Mammalia Syst Biol 41 3 372 378 doi 10 1093 sysbio 41 3 372 S2CID 86132781 Sereno Paul C 1998 A rationale for phylogenetic definitions with application to the higher level taxonomy of Dinosauria Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie Abhandlungen 210 41 83 doi 10 1127 njgpa 210 1998 41 Sereno Paul C 1999 Definitions in phylogenetic taxonomy critique and rationale Syst Biol 48 2 329 351 doi 10 1080 106351599260328 PMID 12066711 Sereno Paul C 2005 The Logical Basis of Phylogenetic Taxonomy Syst Biol 54 4 595 619 doi 10 1080 106351591007453 PMID 16109704 Taylor Michael P 2007 Phylogenetic definitions in the pre PhyloCode era implications for naming clades under the PhyloCode PaleoBios 27 1 6 Wilkinson Mark 2006 Identifying stable reference taxa for phylogenetic nomenclature Zool Scr 35 109 112 doi 10 1111 j 1463 6409 2005 00213 x S2CID 85702468 Wyss A R Meng J 1996 Application of phylogenetic taxonomy to poorly resolved crown clades a stem modified node based definition of Rodentia Syst Biol 45 4 559 568 doi 10 1093 sysbio 45 4 559 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phylogenetic nomenclature amp oldid 1187132501, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.