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  2. Phylogenetic inertia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phylogenetic_inertia

    Evolution of fish to tetrapods. The basic body plan has been phylogenetically constrained. Most terrestrial vertebrates have a body plan that consist of four limbs. The phylogenetic inertia hypothesis suggests that this body plan is observed, not because it happens to be optimal, but because tetrapods are derived from a clade of fishes (Sarcopterygii) which also have four limbs.

  3. Phylogenetic reconciliation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phylogenetic_reconciliation

    The principle of phylogenetic reconciliation was introduced in 1979 [14] to account for differences between genes and species-level phylogenies. In a parsimonious setting, two evolutionary events, gene duplication and gene loss were invoked to explain the discrepancies between a gene tree and a species tree.

  4. Phylogenetic invariants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phylogenetic_invariants

    Symmetry invariants are non-phylogenetic in nature; they take on the expected value of zero regardless of the tree topology. However, it is possible to determine whether a particular multiple sequence alignment fits the Jukes-Cantor model of evolution (i.e., by testing whether the site patterns of the appropriate types are present in equal numbers).

  5. Biological constraints - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_constraints

    Biological constraints are factors which make populations resistant to evolutionary change. One proposed definition of constraint is "A property of a trait that, although possibly adaptive in the environment in which it originally evolved, acts to place limits on the production of new phenotypic variants."

  6. Phylogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phylogenesis

    Taxonomy (Greek language τάξις, taxis = 'order', 'arrangement' + νόμος, nomos = 'law' or 'science') is the classification, identification and naming of organisms. . It is usually richly informed by phylogenetics, but remains a methodologically and logically distinct discipline.

  7. Phylogenetic tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phylogenetic_tree

    A phylogenetic tree, phylogeny or evolutionary tree is a graphical representation which shows the evolutionary history between a set of species or taxa during a specific time. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In other words, it is a branching diagram or a tree showing the evolutionary relationships among various biological species or other entities based upon ...

  8. Choanoflagellate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choanoflagellate

    [13] [21] A colonial species from Mono Lake, Barroeca monosierra, forms spheres filled with a branched network of an extracellular matrix where a microbiome of different species of symbiotic bacteria live. [22] [23] In October 2019, scientists found a new band behaviour of choanoflagellates: they apparently can coordinate to respond to light. [24]

  9. Phylogenetic bracketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phylogenetic_bracketing

    Phylogenetic bracketing is a method of inference used in biological sciences. It is used to infer the likelihood of unknown traits in organisms based on their position in a phylogenetic tree. One of the main applications of phylogenetic bracketing is on extinct organisms, known only from fossils, going back to the last universal common ancestor ...