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The group of "warm-blooded animals" is polyphyletic.
A polyphyletic (Greek for "of many races") group is one
whose members' last common ancestor is not a member of the
group.
For example, the group consisting of warm-blooded animals is polyphyletic,
because it contains both mammals and birds, but the most recent common ancestor
of mammals and birds was cold-blooded. Warm-bloodedness evolved
separately in the ancestors of mammals and the ancestors of birds,
so it is not a true phylogenetic grouping.
Scientific
classification aims to group species together such that every group is
descended from a single common ancestor, and the elimination of
groups that are found to be polyphyletic is therefore a common
goal, and is often the stimulus for major revisions of the
classification schemes. A polyphyletic group can be "fixed" either
by excluding clades or by adding
the common ancestor.
Opinions differ as to whether valid groups need to contain
all the descendants of a common ancestor. Groups that do
so are called monophyletic, and according to cladistics it should be
the aim of classification to ensure that all groups have this
property. However, many other taxonomists would argue that there is
a valid place for groups that are paraphyletic, i.e.
contains its most recent common ancestor but does not contain all
the descendants of that ancestor.
Examples
of polyphyly
- The group of all warm-blooded animals is polyphyletic because
it includes birds and mammals, but their last common ancestor was
not warm-blooded.
Cladistics
generally discourages polyphyletic groups
In most cladistics-based schools of taxonomy, the existence of
polyphyletic groups (as well as paraphyletic groups)
in a classification is discouraged. Monophyletic groups
(that is, clades) are considered by these schools of
thought to be the most important grouping of organisms, for the following reasons:
- Clades are simple to define: a typical clade definition is "All
descendants of the nearest common ancestor of species X and Y". On
the other hand, polyphyletic and paraphyletic groups are always
defined in terms of clades, for example "reptiles are the Sauropsid clade, minus the Aves clade". Or "Warm-blooded
animals are the Aves clade plus the Mammals clade". Because
polyphyletic and paraphyletic groups are defined in terms of clades
plus or minus other clades, they are considered less important than
monophyletic (single, whole) clades.
- For a given evolutionary tree of, say, N nodes, there are
exactly N clades (one per node). However, the number of
paraphyletic groups and polyphyletic groups is exponentially larger
than that, on the order of 2N. Yet only a small fraction
of the paraphyletic groups are given names or discussed.
- Polyphyletic groups often have their origin in traditional
taxonomy, based on similar morphological characteristics. The
original perception may have been that the group was entirely
descended from a single ancestor. If such a group is later
discovered (for instance, due to convergent evolution) to be
polyphyletic, rather than monophyletic, then such a group loses its
original significance.
See also
References
- Colin Tudge (2000). The Variety of
Life. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198604262.
External
links