Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1

254 ■ CHAPTER 14 The History of Life


BIODIVERSITY


some combination of these. An evolutionary
tree maps the relationships between ancestral
groups and their descendants, and it clusters
the most closely related groups on neighboring
branches.
In an evolutionary tree, organisms are
de picted as if they were leaves at the tips of
the tree branches. A given ancestor and all its
descendants make up a clade, or branch, on the
evolutionary tree. Archaeopteryx and all subse-
quent animals that evolved from it are consid-
ered a clade (Figure 14.6).
A node marks the moment in time when
an ancestral group split, or diverged, into two

on two legs and had hollow, thin-walled bones
(as birds do). Theropods were a diverse group of
dinosaurs (Figure 14.5). Most were carnivores,
including insectivores, but a few were herbi-
vores or omnivores. There were theropods that
could swim and eat fish. Some theropod species
boasted enlarged scales, and of course, many
theropods had feathers.
Xu and other scientists map out lineages
using a diagram called an evolutionary
tree, a model of evolutionary relationships
among groups of organisms based on simi-
larities and differences in their DNA, physi-
cal features, biochemical characteristics, or

Spinosaurus
aegyptiacus

Spinosaurus Tyrannosaurus Velociraptor

Archaeopteryx Eosinopteryx Aurornis Xiaotingia

Deinonychus

Figure 14.5


Dinosaurs large and small


Theropods ranged in size from tiny, like a chicken, to huge, like the group’s most famous member, Tyra n n o s a u ru s rex.


Q1: In what ways were theropods the same as modern birds? Give at least two similarities.

Q2: In what ways did theropods differ from modern birds? Give at least two differences.

Q3: Birds are often referred to as “living dinosaurs.” Is this accurate? Why or why not?
Free download pdf