Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1
34 CHAPTER 2

but she is still more closely related to her sister. Likewise, two closely related spe-
cies may be less similar to each other than one is to a more distantly related species
(FIGURE 2.7). For instance, dolphins are more closely related to hippopotamuses and
humans than they are to sharks, even though they resemble sharks in some ways.
Dolphins have independently evolved fins and a body form adapted for swimming.
Crocodiles and lizards are superficially more similar to each other than they are to
birds, but crocodiles are more closely related to birds than they are to lizards. The
MRCA of lizards, crocodiles, and birds certainly had a lizardlike body form, but
birds evolved more differences from that ancestral form than crocodiles did. Even
though certain aspects of similarity may be used as data to determine the relationships
among species, a phylogeny portrays relationship (common ancestry), not similarity.
A phylogenetic tree may be drawn in any of several equivalent ways. The
junctions may be angular (FIGURE 2.8A) or rectangular (FIGURE 2.8B). Fig ure
2.8B illustrates three equivalent trees that differ in the orientation of the implied
time axis. Figure 2.8A shows that the clades arising from a branch point may

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
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Au:

Q:

(A) (B) (C)

FIGURE 2.7 Similarity versus relationship.
(A) Chimpanzees and monkeys are more
closely related to each other than to ro-
dents, and they are also more similar.
(B) Dolphins are closely related to hip-
popotamuses and other mammals, even
though they superficially look more like
sharks. (C) Crocodiles and birds share a
more recent common ancestor than either
does with lizards, but birds look very differ-
ent because they have undergone more
evolutionary changes than crocodiles.

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_02.08.ai Date 11-02-2016

(A) (B) (C)
1 2 1 2 3

1 3

3

2

3 2 1

3 1 2

2 1 3

1 2 3

3

2

FIGURE 2.8 A) These three trees are (^1
equivalent: they all show that species 2
and 3 are the closest relatives. (B) These
three trees are equivalent to each other,
but they differ in the direction in which
the flow of time is shown (upward, to
the right, and down). These trees are
also equivalent to those in (A) since
again species 2 and 3 are the closest
relatives. The trees in (A) and (B) differ in
how the shapes of the branching events
are shown. (C) These two trees are not
equivalent to each other, or to the trees
in (A) and (B), because they show dif-
ferent species as each other’s closest
relatives.

02_EVOL4E_CH02.indd 34 3/23/17 8:59 AM

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