Biology 1001A Lecture Notes - Lecture 20: Synapomorphy, Ingroups And Outgroups, Institute For Operations Research And The Management Sciences

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Unkown; (either ancestral or derived may be unique trait to one species or trait was lost in some lineages and reappeared. Outgroup analysis can tell us whether trait is ancestral or derived but not always how the principle of parsimony informs outgroup analysis and helps identify the most likely phylogeny. Simplest explanation is the one that is most likely true. Lowest number of gains/losses of a trait. Whichever tree requires the fewest evolutionary changes (gains or losses of a trait), is probably correct. How many evolutionary changes there needs to be on each of the trees (how many gains/losses of synapomorphic traits) traits that are, and are not, synapomorphies (given a suitable outgroup and a distribution of traits) Traits that are shared between all species of the phylogeny may most likely be ancestral therefore not a synapomorphy. Traits that are shared between some species and are recently inherited may indicate a synapomorphy.

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