Grade 12: Systematics Based On Evolutionary Relationships: Cladistics and Phylogeny
Grade 12: Systematics Based On Evolutionary Relationships: Cladistics and Phylogeny
Grade 12: Systematics Based On Evolutionary Relationships: Cladistics and Phylogeny
SCHOO
L
Grade
12
BIOLOGY II
QUARTER 3 – MODULE 6
Systematics Based on
Evolutionary Relationships:
Cladistics and Phylogeny
General Biology 2– Grade 12
Alternative Delivery Mode
Quarter 3 –Module 6: Systematics Based on Evolutionary Relationships:
Cladistics and Phylogeny
This learning resource hopes to engage the learners into guided and independent
learning activities at their own pace and time. Furthermore, this also aims to help
learners acquire the needed 21st century skills while taking into consideration
their needs and circumstances.
In addition to the material in the main text, you will also see this box in the body of
the module:
As a facilitator you are expected to orient the learners on how to use this module.
You also need to keep track of the learners' progress while allowing them to
manage their own learning. Furthermore, you are expected to encourage and assist
the learners as they do the tasks included in the module.
This module was designed to provide you with fun and meaningful opportunities
for guided and independent learning at your own pace and time. You will be
enabled to process the contents of the learning resource while being an active
learner.
If you encounter any difficulty in answering the tasks in this module, do not
hesitate to consult your teacher or facilitator. Always bear in mind that you are not
alone.
We hope that through this material, you will experience meaningful learning and
gain deep understanding of the relevant competencies. You can do it
What I Need to Know
This module was designed and written with you in mind. It is here to help
learners to know the basic principles of taxonomy in the classification and naming
of organisms. This chapter focuses on a system classification based on the genetic
material of organisms and establishment of their revolutionary relatedness.
After going through this module, you are expected to describe species diversity and
cladistics, including types of evidence and procedures that can be used to establish
evolutionary relationships (STEM_BIO_IIIh-j-16).
The following are the specific objectives:
a. Demonstrate how shared derived characters can be used to reveal degrees of
relationship; and
b. Build cladograms to infer evolutionary relatedness.
What I Know
Choose the letter of the best answer. Write the chosen letter on a separate sheet of
paper.
1. Which of the following best define taxonomy?
a. Branch of science that deals with the study of living thing.
b. Branch of biology that deals with the studying of animals.
c. Branch of science that deals with the study of origin of diseases.
d. Branch of biology that deals with the classification and naming of
organism.
2. Who is the father of taxonomy?
a. Carl Linnaeus c. Robert Hooke
b. Gregor Mendel d. Gregor Mendel
3. It can be defined as the study of the pathways of evolution.
a. Cladistics c. Phenetics
b. Monophyletic d. Phylogenetics
4. The common ancestor of all taxa?
a. Root Branch c. Branch
b. Clade d. Node Root
5. It pertains to a taxon whose members were derived from two or more
ancestors not common to all members.
a. Monophyletic c. Polyphyletic
b. Paraphyletic d. Tetraphyletic
6. A group of two or more taxa or DNA sequences that includes both their
common ancestor and all their descendent.
a. Branch c. Node
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b. Clade d. Root
7. A tool in molecular biology that uses computer technology to manage
biological information.
a. Bioinformatics c. Molecular clock
b. DNA barcoding d. Sequence alignment
8. It It shows the divergence of two species.
a. Branch c. Phylogenetic tree
b. Branch points d. Root
9. This constitutes the genetic information of all living entities that passes on
from generation to generation.
a. DNA c. RNA
b. Chromosomes d. All of the above
10.This uses a computer software to align and detect similarities of sequences
to construct a phylogenetic tree.
a. Bioinformatics c. Molecular clock
b. DNA barcoding d. Sequence alignment
Lesson
Cladistics and Phylogeny
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Biologists realized that the arrangement of organisms into taxa reflects the
pattern of evolutionary relationships among organisms in which the degree of
relatedness is proportional to the shared categories of two organisms.
What’s In:
What’s New
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II. Procedure:
Analyze the given questions. Explain and elaborate your answers.
1. Explain how morphological structure, developmental characteristics and DNA
relatedness are used in the classification of living things.
2. Explain how species diversity is shown by a cladogram. Consider the
following cladogram. How many clades does it show?
What is It
Systematic Biology
Along with the increase in understanding of scientist about the nature of the
living world, they began not only to name and classify organisms but also to
establish evolutionary relatedness and history. Scientists call this study of
diversification of organisms, both modern life forms and extinct, and their
evolutionary relationships as systematics is that the former only focuses on
naming, describing, classifying, and preserving collections of species whereas the
latter also examines their evolutionary histories and environmental adaptations
that entail their survival. Nowadays, the study organisms normally used molecular
biology and computer programs for bioinformatics.
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a clade wherein each member may be morphologically distinct from each other
because of divergent evolution.
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origin among classified organisms. Each branch represents the hierarchical
classification of groups while the branch points show the divergence of two species.
The length of branches is equivalent to the amount of character change in the
species.
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Fig. 3. The difference between a cladogram and a phylogram.
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What’s More
1. Use the data above to arrange the group of organisms based on their shared
derived traits.
2. For each group, the traits or characters are already listed. For each character,
determine which state is ancestral or primitive and which is derived. This is
usually done by comparing with the outgroup. Traits found in the outgroup are
likely to be ancestral or primitive. Similarly, traits not found in the outgroup are
considered derived. In cladistics, it is the derived traits shared among taxa that
that should be placed in the cladogram.
3. Group taxa according to their shared derived character(s).
4. Once you evaluated the characters, you may start constructing your cladogram.
(note: Outgroup is always placed at the base of the cladogram)
T
y
p
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What I Have Learned
Summary:
Phenetics aim to classify organisms on the overall similarity of morphological
characteristics among them without considering the organismal evolutionary
relationships.
The discovery of DNA structure led to the advancement of the science of
classifying organisms.
Every organism has a DNA, an RNA, and proteins. DNA constitutes the genetic
information of all living entities that passes on from generation to generation
without being largely altered.
Bioinformatics-- a tool in molecular biology that uses computer technology to
manage biological information.
Phylogenetics-is a field of systematics that studies phylogeny-the evolutionary
relationships among individuals or groups of species and their evolutionary
history based on the comparison of their genetic characteristics.
A monophyletic group is a group that consists of a single most recent common
ancestor and all species.
What I Can Do
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Assessment
Directions: Choose the letter of the best answer. Write the chosen letter on a
separate sheet of paper.
1. The first scientist to classify organisms was____?
A. Aristotle C. Robert Hooke
B. Carolus Linnaeus D. Robert Kocks
2. Which term best describes a group of species without a known common
ancestor?
A. Binomial group C. Paraphyletic group
B. Monophyletic group D. Polyphyletic group
2. It is an attempt to classify organisms based on overall similarity, usually in
morphology or other observable traits, regardless of their phylogeny or
evolutionary relation.
A. Cladistics C. Phenetics
B. Cladogram D. Taxonomy
3. What is the difference between phenetics, and cladistics is the method used in
classifying organisms?
A. Phenetics classifies organisms based on their paraphyletic and structural
features while cladistics classifies organisms based on morphological group.
B. Phenetics classifies organisms based on morphological ancestry and
evolutionary relationship while cladistics classifies organism based on
structural features only.
C. Phenetics classifies organisms based on morphological and structural
features while cladistics classifies organisms based on their ancestry and
evolutionary relationships.
D. Phenetics classifies organisms based on ancestry and structural features
while cladistics classifies organisms based on their structural and
evolutionary relationships.
4. A yardstick for measuring the absolute time of evolutionary change on the
observation that some genes and other regions of genomes appear to evolve at
constant rates.
A. Bioinformatics C. Sanger sequencing
B. Molecular clock D. Sequence alignment clock
5. Phylogenetic trees:
A. Aim to show phenotype similarity.
B. Are static and never change.
C. Show the exact ages of species.
D. Aim to show evolutionary histories through common ancestors.
6. Shared derived characteristics of phylogenetic are?
A. Phenotypically the same
B. Used to characterize a clade.
C. Used only to characterize species.
D. Characters that originated in an ancestor of the taxon.
7. A tool in molecular biology that uses computer technology to manage biological
information.
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A. Bioinformatics C. Sequence alignment
B. DNA Barcoding D. Sanger sequencing
8. What is the importance of DNA barcoding?
A. Power of genetic resources
B. Protection of endangered specie
C. Stock assessments and Water quality monitoring
D. All of the Above
9. A tree showing an estimate of a phylogeny and the degree of evolutionary
changes depictedd in eacg span of the tree’s branch.
A. Cladistics C. Phylogenetics
B. Cladogram D. Phylogram
Additional Activities
Activity 5. Explain the percentage of Earth's species that are now extinct.
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