Student Exploration: Cladograms
Student Exploration: Cladograms
Student Exploration: Cladograms
Vocabulary: adaptation, amino acid, amnion, artiodactyla, bipedal, clade, cladistics, cladogram,
convergent evolution, evolution, flower, mammary glands, molecular, morphological,
multicellular, parsimony, sagittal crest, phloem, selenodont teeth, SNP, xylem
1. Look at the images below. Which two organisms do you think are most closely related?
Deer and turtle
2. Why do you think so? They both own four legs and a tail, unlike the worm.
Gizmo Warm-up
Cladistics is a method of hypothesizing the evolutionary
relationships between species. A cladogram is a branching diagram
that illustrates these relationships. For example, the cladogram on the
right shows that deer are more closely related to turtles than to
worms. In the Cladograms Gizmo, you will use morphological
(physical characteristics) and molecular data to create cladograms.
To begin, make sure Plants is selected for the Organism group and Morphological is
selected for the Data type. Click on one of the characteristics to the left of the table on the
TABLE tab. Information about the characteristic will be shown on the ORGANISM tab.
Using the information on the ORGANISM tab, describe each of the characteristics below.
Xylem and phloem: Tissues in plants which transport water and solutes the
Flowers: The part of a plant that contains reproductive organs which are surrounded by colored petals
2018
Activity A: Get the Gizmo ready:
Morphological Check that Plants and Morphological are still
cladogram selected for the group and data type.
1. Fill in: Using what you learned in the warm-up, fill in the table. Clicking one of the boxes of
the table will add a check mark to indicate the presence of a characteristic. Then, select
Check table and adjust any of the boxes you may have filled in incorrectly.
Drag the arrows ( ) below the table to order the organism columns from fewest
characteristics on the left to most on the right.
3. Build: Select the CLADOGRAM tab at the top left. The goal of a cladogram is to show the
relationships among a group of organisms. Organisms that are most closely related should
share the most recent common ancestor (highest branch on the tree). Organisms that are
most distantly related should share the oldest common ancestor (lowest branch on the tree).
A. Which two organisms are most closely related? Cycad and Arabidopsis
2018
Activity A (continued from previous page)
Describe how the organisms in your cladogram are related through common ancestors.
Arabidopsis and Algae both share the most distat common ancestor. After
that Arabidopsis and Moss share a common ancestor. Arabidopsis and Cycad
share the most recent common ancestor.
5. Label: The purple lines represent a characteristic change, or adaptation. On the cladogram
above, organisms B and C share characteristic 3. Organism B either gained or lost
characteristic 1 after diverging from organism C.
In the Gizmo, select a purple line to open a text box and fill in the characteristics.
Based on your cladogram, from oldest to newest, in what order did the three characteristics
(flowers, multicellularity, and xylem/ phloem) evolve?
6. Score: The parsimony principle states that the most likely solution is usually the simplest. In
general, biologists try to create cladograms that require the fewest evolutionary changes.
For example, it is more likely that xylem and phloem evolved once rather than multiple
times. The “parsimony score” calculates how many changes occur in a given cladogram.
C. Select Show best possible parsimony score. Have you created a cladogram with
7. Revise: If you have not created a cladogram with the lowest possible parsimony score,
adjust the cladogram until you do. Make sure that the organisms are ordered from fewest
shared characteristics on the left to most shared characteristics on the right.
Select Show accepted cladogram. Does your cladogram match the scientifically accepted
Click the camera ( ) to take a snapshot of your cladogram. Right click the image, select
Copy, and then paste the image into a blank document that you will turn in with this sheet.
2018
Get the Gizmo ready:
Activity B:
Select Insects for the organism group and
Cladogram
Morphological for the data type.
practice
Select the ORGANISMS tab.
Introduction: In this activity, you will practice creating larger, more complex cladograms.
Question: How do you create parsimonious cladograms with more complex branching?
1. Build: As you did in activity A, use the information provided to fill in the table of
characteristics for insects. Check that your table is correct. On the CLADOGRAM tab, use
your table to create an insect cladogram. Make adjustments until you achieve the lowest
possible parsimony score, and then compare your cladogram to the accepted cladogram.
When you are done, take a snapshot of the cladogram and save it in your document.
Which two insects are most closely related? The bee and the beetle
Take snapshots of the finished cladograms and save them in your document.
3. Observe: Sometimes a trait can evolve separately in different groups. For example, both
bats and birds have wings, but their common ancestor did not have wings.
In the Animals cladogram, which trait evolved two different times? Bipedal
4. Think and discuss: What could cause similar traits to evolve independently in different
species?
Species that live in the same environment or face similar threats may need to develop traits
that help them adapt to their situations. For example, hedgehogs and porcupines
independently evolved prickly spines to protect themselves from predators. This process is
called convergent evolution, where similar characteristics evolved in species of different
lineages.
2018
Activity C: Get the Gizmo ready:
Molecular Select the ORGANISMS tab, Plants, and
cladograms Molecular data.
Introduction: The creation of cladograms has been improved with the advent of protein and
DNA sequencing. A protein is a sequence of hundreds of amino acids. As organisms evolve,
some parts of these sequences may change as one amino acid is substituted for another.
Scientists can count these changes to try to reconstruct evolutionary relationships. In this
activity, you will use protein sequence data to create a cladogram.
1. Collect data: On the ORGANISMS tab, the amino acid sequences for the protein
cytochrome c oxidase in four plant species are listed. Select the top organism name on the
table. Compare the amino acids in that species to the amino acids in the other three
species. If an amino acid does NOT match the amino acid in the top row, click the box to
turn it orange. Mark all of the differences in the entire sequence as you scroll to the right.
Use this data to fill in the table on the TABLE tab.
Press Reset. Select the organism in the second row. Compare the amino acids in this
organism to the other two below. Fill in the table. Continue this process until the table is
complete. Select Check table to make sure the table was filled in correctly.
A. Which two organisms have the fewest differences? Cycad and Arabidopsis
Use the arrows to the right of the table to drag those two species to the bottom rows.
B. Which organism is most similar to the two organisms in part A above? Moss
C. Which organism is the most different compared to the other three? Algae
3. Build: Select the ORGANISMS tab. If you have organized the table correctly, the species
should be organized from least-related on the left to most-related on the right.
2018