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Page 1: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Reconstructing andUsing Phylogenies

16

Page 2: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies

Key Concepts

• 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

• 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

• 16.3 Phylogeny Makes Biology Comparative and Predictive

• 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

Page 3: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Chapter 16 Opening Question

How are phylogenetic methods used to resurrect protein sequences from extinct organisms?

Page 4: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

All of life is related through a common ancestor:

Phylogeny—the evolutionary history of these relationships

Phylogenetic tree—a diagrammatic reconstruction of that history

Page 5: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

A lineage is a series of ancestor and descendant populations, shown as a line drawn on a time axis:

Page 6: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

When a single lineage divides into two, it is depicted as a split or node:

Page 7: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Each descendant population gives rise to a new lineage, which continues to evolve:

Page 8: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

A phylogenetic tree may portray the evolutionary history of:

• All life forms

• Major evolutionary groups

• Small groups of closely related species• Individuals• Populations• Genes

Page 9: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

The common ancestor of all the organisms in the tree forms the root of the tree.

Page 10: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

The splits represent events where one lineage diverged into two, such as:

• A speciation event (for a tree of species)

• A gene duplication event (for a tree of genes)

• A transmission event (for a tree of viral lineages transmitted through a host population)

Page 11: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Vertical distances between branches don’t have any meaning, and the vertical order of lineages is arbitrary.

Page 12: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Taxon—any group of species that we designate with a name

Clade—taxon that consists of all the evolutionary descendants of a common ancestor

Identify a clade by picking any point on the tree and tracing all the descendant lineages.

Page 13: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.1 Clades Represent All the Descendants of a Common Ancestor

Page 14: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Sister species: Two species that are each other’s closest relatives

Sister clades: Any two clades that are each other’s closest relatives

Page 15: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Before the 1980s, phylogenetic trees were used mostly in evolutionary biology, and in systematics—the study and classification of biodiversity.

Today trees are widely used in molecular biology, biomedicine, physiology, behavior, ecology, and virtually all other fields of biology.

Page 16: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Evolutionary relationships among species form the basis for biological classification.

As new species are discovered, phylogenetic analyses are reviewed and revised.

The tree of life’s evolutionary framework allows us to make predictions about the behavior, ecology, physiology, genetics, and morphology of species.

Page 17: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Biochemical and genetic similarities provide evidence for evolution and ancestry.

DNA nucleotide and protein sequences are compared to provide insight into evolutionary relationships.

Page 18: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Homologous features:

• Shared by two or more species

• Inherited from a common ancestor

They can be any heritable traits, including DNA sequences, protein structures, anatomical structures, and behavior patterns.

Page 19: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Each character of an organism evolves from one condition (the ancestral trait) to another condition (the derived trait).

Shared derived traits provide evidence of the common ancestry of a group and are called synapomorphies.

The vertebral column is a synapomorphy of the vertebrates. The ancestral trait was an undivided supporting rod.

Page 20: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

Similar traits can develop in unrelated groups:

Convergent evolution—when superficially similar traits may evolve independently in different lineages

Page 21: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

In an evolutionary reversal, a character may revert from a derived state back to an ancestral state.

These two types of traits are called homoplastic traits, or homoplasies.

Page 22: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.2 The Bones Are Homologous, the Wings Are Not

Page 23: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary History

A trait may be ancestral or derived, depending on the point of reference.

Example:

• Feathers are an ancestral trait for modern birds. But in a phylogeny of all living vertebrates, they are a derived trait found only in birds.

Page 24: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

Ingroup—the group of organisms of primary interest

Outgroup—species or group known to be closely related to, but phylogenetically outside, the group of interest

Page 25: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Table 16.1 Eight Vertebrates and the Presence or Absence of Some Shared Derived Traits

Page 26: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.3 Inferring a Phylogenetic Tree

Page 27: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

Parsimony principle—the preferred explanation of observed data is the simplest explanation

In phylogenies, this entails minimizing the number of evolutionary changes that need to be assumed over all characters in all groups.

The best hypothesis is one that requires the fewest homoplasies.

Page 28: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

Any trait that is genetically determined can be used in a phylogenetic analysis.

Morphology—presence, size, shape, or other attributes of body parts

Phylogenies of most extinct species depend almost exclusively on morphology.

Fossils provide evidence that helps distinguish ancestral from derived traits. The fossil record can also reveal when lineages diverged.

Page 29: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

Limitations of using morphology:

• Some taxa show few morphological differences

• It is difficult to compare distantly related species

• Some morphological variation is caused by environment

Page 30: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

Development:

Similarities in developmental patterns may reveal evolutionary relationships.

Example:

• The larvae of sea squirts has a notochord, which is also present in all vertebrates.

Page 31: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.4 The Chordate Connection (Part 1)

Page 32: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.4 The Chordate Connection (Part 2)

Page 33: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.4 The Chordate Connection (Part 3)

Page 34: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.4 The Chordate Connection (Part 4)

Page 35: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

Behavior:

Some traits are cultural or learned, and may not reflect evolutionary relationships (e.g. bird songs).

Other traits have a genetic basis and can be used in phylogenies (e.g. frog calls).

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Concept 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

Molecular data:

DNA sequences have become the most widely used data for constructing phylogenetic trees.

Nuclear, chloroplast, and mitochondrial DNA sequences are used.

Information on gene products (such as amino acid sequences of proteins) are also used.

Page 37: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

Mathematical models are now used to describe DNA changes over time.

Models can account for multiple changes at a given sequence position, and different rates of change at different positions.

Maximum likelihood methods identify the tree that most likely produced the observed data. They incorporate more information about evolutionary change than do parsimony methods.

Page 38: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.2 Phylogeny Can Be Reconstructed from Traits of Organisms

Phylogenetic trees can be tested with computer simulations and by experiments on living organisms.

These studies have confirmed the accuracy of phylogenetic methods and have been used to refine those methods and extend them to new applications.

Page 39: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.3 Phylogeny Makes Biology Comparative and Predictive

Applications of phylogenetic trees

• Phylogeny can clarify the origin and evolution of traits that help in understanding fundamental biological processes. This information is then widely applied in life sciences fields, including agriculture and medicine.

Page 40: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.3 Phylogeny Makes Biology Comparative and Predictive

Self-compatibility:

• Most flowering plants reproduce by mating with another individual (outcrossing)

Self-incompatible species have mechanisms to prevent self-fertilization.

Other plants are selfing, which requires that they be self-compatible.

The evolution of angiosperm fertilization mechanisms was examined in the genus Leptosiphon.

Page 41: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.6 A Portion of the Leptosiphon Phylogeny

Page 42: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.3 Phylogeny Makes Biology Comparative and Predictive

Zoonotic diseases:

• Caused by infectious organisms transmitted from an animal of a different species (e.g. rabies)

Phylogenetic analyses help determine when, where, and how a disease first entered a human population.

One example is Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV).

Page 43: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.7 Phylogenetic Tree of Immunodeficiency Viruses

Page 44: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.3 Phylogeny Makes Biology Comparative and Predictive

Evolution of complex traits:

Some adaptations relate to mating behavior and sexual selection.

One example is the tail of male swordtail fish. Phylogenetic analysis supported the sensory exploitation hypothesis—female swordtails had a preexisting bias for males with long tails.

Page 45: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.8 The Origin of a Sexually Selected Trait

Page 46: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.3 Phylogeny Makes Biology Comparative and Predictive

Reconstructing ancestral traits:

• Morphology, behavior, or nucleotide and amino acid sequences of ancestral species

Example:

• Opsin proteins (pigments involved in vision) were reconstructed in the ancestral archosaur, and it was inferred that it was probably active at night.

Page 47: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.3 Phylogeny Makes Biology Comparative and Predictive

Molecular clocks:

The molecular clock hypothesis states that rates of molecular change are constant enough to predict the timing of lineage splits.

A molecular clock uses the average rate at which a given gene or protein accumulates changes to gauge the time of divergence .

They must be calibrated using independent data—the fossil record, known times of divergence, or biogeographic dates.

Page 48: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.9 A Molecular Clock of the Protein Hemoglobin

Page 49: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.3 Phylogeny Makes Biology Comparative and Predictive

A molecular clock was used to estimate the time when HIV-1 first entered human populations from chimpanzees.

The clock was calibrated using the samples from the 1980s and 1990s, then tested using the samples from the 1950s.

The common ancestor of this group of HIV-1 viruses can also be determined, with an estimated date of origin of about 1930.

Page 50: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.10 Dating the Origin of HIV-1 in Human Populations (Part 1)

Page 51: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.10 Dating the Origin of HIV-1 in Human Populations (Part 2)

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Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

The biological classification system was started by Swedish biologist Carolus Linnaeus in the 1700s.

Binomial nomenclature gives every species a unique name consisting of two parts: the genus to which it belongs, and the species name.

Example:

• Homo sapiens Linnaeus (Linnaeus is the person who first proposed the name)

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Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

Species and genera are further grouped into a hierarchical system of higher categories such as family—the taxon above genus.

Examples:

• The family Hominidae contains humans, plus our recent fossil relatives, plus our closest living relatives, the chimpanzees and gorillas.

• Rosaceae is the family that includes the genus Rosa (roses) and its relatives.

Page 54: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

Families are grouped into orders

Orders into classes

Classes into phyla (singular phylum)

Phyla into kingdoms

Kingdoms into domains

The ranking of taxa within the Linnaean classification is subjective.

Page 55: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

There are 6 kingdoms:

1. Animalia

2. Plantae

3. Fungi

4. Protista

5. Eubacteria

6. Archaebacteria

Page 56: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

There are 3 domains:

1. Archaea

2. Bacteria

3. Eukarya

Page 57: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

Structural and functional evidence supports the relatedness of all domains:

Major features of the genetic code are shared by all modern living systems.

Metabolic pathways are conserved across all domains.

Page 58: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

Structural evidence supports the relatedness of all eukaryotes:

Cytoskeleton networks that facilitate cell movement and transport.

Membrane-bound organelles

Linear chromosomes

Endomembrane systems, such as the ER and nuclear envelope

Page 59: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

Linnaeus recognized the hierarchy of life, but he developed his system before evolutionary thought had become widespread.

Today, biological classifications express the evolutionary relationships of organisms.

Page 60: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

But detailed phylogenetic information is not always available.

Taxa are monophyletic—they contain an ancestor and all descendants of that ancestor, and no other organisms (=clade).

Page 61: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

Polyphyletic—a group that does not include its common ancestor

Paraphyletic—a group that does not include all the descendants of a common ancestor

Page 62: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.11 Monophyletic, Polyphyletic, and Paraphyletic Groups

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Concept 16.4 Phylogeny Is the Basis of Biological Classification

Codes of biological nomenclature:

Biologists around the world follow rules for the use of scientific names, to facilitate communication and dialogue.

There may be many common names for one organism, or the same common name may refer to several species. But there is only one correct scientific name.

Page 64: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.12 Same Common Name, Not the Same Species

Page 65: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Answer to Opening Question

Biologists can reconstruct DNA and protein sequences of a clade’s ancestors if there is enough information about the genomes of their descendants.

Real proteins that correspond to proteins in long-extinct species can be reconstructed.

Mathematical models that incorporate rates of replacement among different amino acid residues, substitution rates among nucleotides, and changes in the rate of molecular evolution among different lineages, are used.

Page 66: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 16. Chapter 16 Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies Key Concepts 16.1 All of Life Is Connected through Its Evolutionary

Figure 16.13 Evolution of Fluorescent Proteins of Corals