Clades

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Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,445 posts

265 months

Sunday 11th February
quotequote all
I came across the word 'clades' as a taxonomic term.

With a biology degree on the CV I thought I'd heard all taxonomic terms, so I googled it...

'a group of organisms believed to comprise all the evolutionary descendants of a common ancestor.'

'What is an example of a clade?
Clade Definition, Uses & Examples | Study.com
An example of a clade is the primates clade. This clade contains extant species such as: humans, apes, new world monkeys, old world monkeys, lorises, and lemurs.'



So why not just call them primates?

paddy1970

700 posts

109 months

Sunday 11th February
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While "primates" is a term used in both traditional and cladistic taxonomy, referring to the group as a clade specifically highlights the evolutionary perspective.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,445 posts

265 months

Sunday 11th February
quotequote all
Hmm. I'd have thought taxonomy is taxonomy - ie a tree. From that ot seems perfectly clear what is related to what and what descends from what.

What does 'cladistic taxonomy' add? You already know all the primates are related, that's how it works...! Is it a new term? 'Primates clade' just seems to be adding a word for the sake of it...

paddy1970

700 posts

109 months

Sunday 11th February
quotequote all
Cladistics, introduced by Willi Hennig in the 1950s, offers a more rigorous framework for classifying life based on shared derived characteristics (synapomorphies) and the concept of monophyly.


paddy1970

700 posts

109 months

Sunday 11th February
quotequote all
It is not merely a new term but a reflection of an analytical approach that seeks to align taxonomy with the principles of evolutionary biology.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,445 posts

265 months

Monday 12th February
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Hmm. So this is to Darwin as calculus is to arithmetic...

profpointy

8 posts

66 months

Monday 12th February
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As I understand it, and it isn't my field but I am moderately well iread, is that the old categorisations, family, genera, species and what not weren't done consistently and could be semi arbitrary or misleading

With a Clade, all the descendants must also be part of the clade; you can't evolve out of a clade. "reptiles" illustrate the confusion. Birds are now known to be a type of dinosaur, and thus are closer related to crocodilians than crocs are to lizards. So really birds should be considered reptiles. I think those in the trade still do speak of reptilomorphs as a more formal and solid clade of "reptiles" including birds

Basically to make sense of evolutionary biology you need to be strict than anything determined to be a clade inlcudes all its descendants. Doing it the traditional way you have reptiles excluding some descendants (birds) but including lizards and snakes which is a bit silly or at best misleading.

Fish are even worse so "fish" is no longer a respectable term, unless you accept a cow is a fish. You and I are a much closer relation to a salmon than the salmon is to a shark for example

This guy on youtube explains it far better than me, using the example of apes and monkeys, and why logically apes (us included) ARE monkeys

https://youtu.be/CkO8k12QCP0?feature=shared



Edited by profpointy on Monday 12th February 15:48

QJumper

2,709 posts

26 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
I came across the word 'clades' as a taxonomic term.

With a biology degree on the CV I thought I'd heard all taxonomic terms, so I googled it...

'a group of organisms believed to comprise all the evolutionary descendants of a common ancestor.'

'What is an example of a clade?
Clade Definition, Uses & Examples | Study.com
An example of a clade is the primates clade. This clade contains extant species such as: humans, apes, new world monkeys, old world monkeys, lorises, and lemurs.'

So why not just call them primates?
Looking at it from a laguage perspective, rather than an evolutionary biology one, it makes sense.

Thay are called primates, but primates is just one of many clades. So you need a common term that applies to each grouping.

Take this question for example: "Which clade do chimpanzees belong to?"

Without the word clade, how would you expess that question using just one unambiguous word instead of clade?

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,445 posts

265 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
QJumper said:
Looking at it from a laguage perspective, rather than an evolutionary biology one, it makes sense.

Thay are called primates, but primates is just one of many clades. So you need a common term that applies to each grouping.

Take this question for example: "Which clade do chimpanzees belong to?"

Without the word clade, how would you expess that question using just one unambiguous word instead of clade?
And what is the answer? All of the below could be a 'clade' it seems, it just depends how high up you draw the line:

Domain: Eukarya
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Family: Hominidae
Genus: Pan
Species: troglodytes

profpointy

8 posts

66 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
It is indeed "clades all the way up" to paraphrase the old line, so every animal is indeed in a whole set of clades encompassing wider and wider groupings.

Thus (using non scientific names) humans are a clade, part of the great apes clade, part of x, y, z clades, then part of the overall monkey clade (simians I think), then mammals, synapsids, proto-amphibians lobed-fin-fish, chordates etc

But a clade had to have specific characteristics - all descendants are also in the clade, and no non-descendants can be in the clade. The old style of doing things was a bit more arbitrary, with a grouping (reptiles in the old meaning) including some distantly related creatures (lizards) but excluding birds which are closer to crocs than they are to lizards

As I mentioned above, if fish, or even just boney fish were a clade, the mammals, amphibians, dinosaurs (including birds) must also be fish.

Reptiles can inly be saved as a clade if you allow dinosaurs including birds to be reptiles

Happy to defer to someone who has studied such things as some of my details are likely suspect

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,445 posts

265 months

Monday 12th February
quotequote all
Thanks for the explanation. It sounds akin to phlogiston to me - in other words a nice idea based on observations but that actually occludes the true picture. Clades should have been thought of in about 1600, then Darwin would have cleared it all up later. As he did, with a bit of help from Linnaeus.

profpointy

8 posts

66 months

Tuesday 13th February
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Not quite sure which way round your comparison is with phlogiston, but if you are suggesting the old naming was analogous with phlogiston, and the oxygen theory is a bit like clades, then there's something in that analogy

To be fair to traditional taxonomy, unlike phlogiston, it isn't flat out wrong, but merely slightly unhelpful

Re: phlogiston. As a major digression, some 30 plus years ago I applied for a teacher training course (for science). At the interview the lecturer passed out a paper he'd written on the difficulties of explaining combustion to kids and he had an easier to understand model. His explanation may have been easier to understand, but it was utter bks and more or less the phlogiston theory. I did wonder if it was a test and the "correct" response was to say "this is a load of shyte. You can't teach 'em that" but I didn't risk it so instead was suitably non-committal saying it was "interesting". " I was offered a place but, wisely as it turned out, stayed in IT.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,445 posts

265 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
profpointy said:
Not quite sure which way round your comparison is with phlogiston, but if you are suggesting the old naming was analogous with phlogiston, and the oxygen theory is a bit like clades, then there's something in that analogy

To be fair to traditional taxonomy, unlike phlogiston, it isn't flat out wrong, but merely slightly unhelpful
On the contrary, I find 'traditional taxonomy' scientifically accurate and constructive, and 'clades' the sort of thing that might have been thought of before it existed - in other words a loose grouping of organisms based on certain shared characteristics. For example octopuses have an eye structure remarkably like humans, so they must be closely related, when in fact it's an example of convergent evolution. We could also have a clade for organisms that eat only plants, meaning that sheep and blue whales are in the same clade. I don't think that's helpful.

I'd be interested to know which part of traditional taxonomy is wrong. Is it too hard to understand with too many long words?

profpointy said:
Re: phlogiston. As a major digression, some 30 plus years ago I applied for a teacher training course (for science). At the interview the lecturer passed out a paper he'd written on the difficulties of explaining combustion to kids and he had an easier to understand model. His explanation may have been easier to understand, but it was utter bks and more or less the phlogiston theory. I did wonder if it was a test and the "correct" response was to say "this is a load of shyte. You can't teach 'em that" but I didn't risk it so instead was suitably non-committal saying it was "interesting". " I was offered a place but, wisely as it turned out, stayed in IT.
What was the lecturer's version of combustion? Slightly in his defence simplifications have to be made according to the age of the pupil; you can't expect a 10 year old to understand Fermat's theorem. The trick I guess is making something simpler to understand without going too far 'off piste' and thus causing later confusion. I don't remember learning 'combustion' specifically, but we covered oxidation and exothermic reactions which seemed to cover it quite well. Later you encounter 'oxidation is the removal of electrons' which whilst scientifically correct is harder to envisage.

The evolution of science is a fascinating subject. 'The Lunar Men' by Jenny Uglow is a good read.

Edited by Simpo Two on Tuesday 13th February 09:56

Silvanus

5,237 posts

23 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
profpointy said:
Not quite sure which way round your comparison is with phlogiston, but if you are suggesting the old naming was analogous with phlogiston, and the oxygen theory is a bit like clades, then there's something in that analogy

To be fair to traditional taxonomy, unlike phlogiston, it isn't flat out wrong, but merely slightly unhelpful
On the contrary, I find 'traditional taxonomy' scientifically accurate and constructive, and 'clades' the sort of thing that might have been thought of before it existed - in other words a loose grouping of organisms based on certain shared characteristics. For example octopuses have an eye structure remarkably like humans, so they must be closely related, when in fact it's an example of convergent evolution. We could also have a clade for organisms that eat only plants, meaning that sheep and blue whales are in the same clade. I don't think that's helpful.

I'd be interested to know which part of traditional taxonomy is wrong. Is it too hard to understand with too many long words?

profpointy said:
Re: phlogiston. As a major digression, some 30 plus years ago I applied for a teacher training course (for science). At the interview the lecturer passed out a paper he'd written on the difficulties of explaining combustion to kids and he had an easier to understand model. His explanation may have been easier to understand, but it was utter bks and more or less the phlogiston theory. I did wonder if it was a test and the "correct" response was to say "this is a load of shyte. You can't teach 'em that" but I didn't risk it so instead was suitably non-committal saying it was "interesting". " I was offered a place but, wisely as it turned out, stayed in IT.
What was the lecturer's version of combustion? Slightly in his defence simplifications have to be made according to the age of the pupil; you can't expect a 10 year old to understand Fermat's theorem. The trick I guess is making something simpler to understand without going too far 'off piste' and thus causing later confusion. I don't remember learning 'combustion' specifically, but we covered oxidation and exothermic reactions which seemed to cover it quite well. Later you encounter 'oxidation is the removal of electrons' which whilst scientifically correct is harder to envisage.

The evolution of science is a fascinating subject. 'The Lunar Men' by Jenny Uglow is a good read.

Edited by Simpo Two on Tuesday 13th February 09:56
I thought clades grouped animals with shared evolutionary ancestry, not shared characteristics. A human and an octopus wouldn't be the same clade because of similar eyes.

Traditional taxonomy doesn't work well for fish, they are a good example of things being grouped together because of shared characteristics. A shark and a lungfish are both seen as fish, but a lungfish is more closely related to a frog than it is to a shark.


Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,445 posts

265 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Silvanus said:
I thought clades grouped animals with shared evolutionary ancestry, not shared characteristics. A human and an octopus wouldn't be the same clade because of similar eyes.
Exactly my point. Taxonomy groups - or shall we say places in an evolutionary line - animals with shared evolutionary ancestry. If something is later found to be incorrect in the light of new evidence, it's modified. I'm a primate. I know my place hehe

Silvanus said:
Traditional taxonomy doesn't work well for fish, they are a good example of things being grouped together because of shared characteristics. A shark and a lungfish are both seen as fish, but a lungfish is more closely related to a frog than it is to a shark.
I don't think 'shared characteristics' is a very scientific way of grouping things together. The king crab has an immune system remarkably like ours so it's used for research - but we are not actually closely related to king crabs.

profpointy

8 posts

66 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Re phlogiston digression.

I do, and did back then, get that you have to simplify explanations for kids, particularly for chemistry. But whilst I can't remember exactly what was written in a paper I skim read nearly 40 years back, it was more akin to "simplifying" the extinction of the (non-avian) dinosaurs by saying they drowned in the flood, than a legitimate leaving out excess complexity. Phlogiston theory, is flat out wrong rather than a simplification, albeit a good try for the day.

ATG

20,577 posts

272 months

Tuesday 13th February
quotequote all
Isn't treating cladistics as an alternative to "traditional" taxonomy a false dichotomy? There isn't a single traditional taxonomic method in the first place. We start with attempts to group things that are similar based on observable characteristics, then the idea of evolution takes hold so people start trying to group stuff by ancestry and cladistics is just a version of the latter that is informed with a modern understanding of inheritance and, recently, with the ability to sequence specimen's genomes. If you've got a non-recombinant (mostly) tree structure of stuff to describe, breaking up the structure into complete subtrees is a sensible approach, and you can then talk about the hierarchy of subtrees to which an organism belongs. I like it because it doesn't try to impose an arbitrary tree of kingdom, phylum, ... family ... species on the tree ... mainly because I can never remember the categorisation and get the order wrong.

Most importantly, it doesn't stop people having endless arguments about where species boundaries lie. "This finch is a different species from that finch." "No it isn't." "Yes it is, I discovered it and I'm going to call it "Yo Mama So Fat pyrrhula". At which point the conversation moves to the carpark.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

85,445 posts

265 months

Thursday 15th February
quotequote all
profpointy said:
Re phlogiston digression.

I do, and did back then, get that you have to simplify explanations for kids, particularly for chemistry. But whilst I can't remember exactly what was written in a paper I skim read nearly 40 years back, it was more akin to "simplifying" the extinction of the (non-avian) dinosaurs by saying they drowned in the flood, than a legitimate leaving out excess complexity. Phlogiston theory, is flat out wrong rather than a simplification, albeit a good try for the day.
A good point. It just seemed to me that 'clades' seemed like an attempt to make sense of something before the actual answer had been found.

ATG said:
Isn't treating cladistics as an alternative to "traditional" taxonomy a false dichotomy? There isn't a single traditional taxonomic method in the first place. We start with attempts to group things that are similar based on observable characteristics, then the idea of evolution takes hold so people start trying to group stuff by ancestry and cladistics is just a version of the latter that is informed with a modern understanding of inheritance and, recently, with the ability to sequence specimen's genomes. If you've got a non-recombinant (mostly) tree structure of stuff to describe, breaking up the structure into complete subtrees is a sensible approach, and you can then talk about the hierarchy of subtrees to which an organism belongs. I like it because it doesn't try to impose an arbitrary tree of kingdom, phylum, ... family ... species on the tree ... mainly because I can never remember the categorisation and get the order wrong.
Yes, you can use the word 'clade' to describe any grouping, and that's what I find weak about it. The contents of my fridge form a clade. Is science any better off for knowing that? If you can give a clade (a random group) a specific name then you're better informed IMHO. But you support my suspicion that 'clades' are used because the more exact terminology is 'a bit hard' so we'll use an easier one. That's not good science.

ATG said:
Most importantly, it doesn't stop people having endless arguments about where species boundaries lie. "This finch is a different species from that finch." "No it isn't." "Yes it is, I discovered it and I'm going to call it "Yo Mama So Fat pyrrhula". At which point the conversation moves to the carpark.
We used the definition that species can interbreed. If you can't make babies with it, it's a different species (and you should probably stop trying!). Within species you get varieties, races and probably other things too.

I imagined myself living in about 1700 and trying to arrange the elements by cladistics. A clade of brown ones, a clade of silver ones, a clade of gases, a clade of ones that smell. But then Mendeleev and Dalton came along and sorted them all out properly smile

Super Sonic

4,838 posts

54 months

Thursday 15th February
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Clade is nothing to do with similar characteristics, it's all about common ancestors.

ATG

20,577 posts

272 months

Thursday 15th February
quotequote all
Precisely. I thought a clade was defined as being all the descendants of some species (?). I.e. you've got some blob of goo from which all animals descend, ergo animals are a clade with goo as its common ancestor. You've got some horse who's got children and grandchildren. Strictly those horses could also be said to be a clade, but it wouldn't be a useful classification ... unless they all had six legs or wings.

(I am not a biologist, as if anyone would have mistaken me for one.)

Edited by ATG on Friday 16th February 10:44