T HE TREE of LifE 37
least three evolutionary changes. (Convince yourself by trying it out!) So the most
likely hypothesis is that the ancestor had the sequence shown at the root, and that
species then gave rise to four living species by the phylogeny shown in tree 1.
This example touches on two points that we will explore in detail in Chapter
- First, the logic behind our approach here is to find the most likely tree. In this
example, it is the tree in which a change at any given base happens only once.
With other cases, however, that is no longer true. (The same mutation is likely
to happen more than once when mutation rates are very high, the evolutionary
time scale is very long, or there are many species in the phylogeny.) Second, the
evolutionary tree of the hemoglobin gene probably reflects the evolutionary tree
of the squirrel species, but there are situations in which it will not. For example,
if two distantly related squirrel species hybridized in the past, the hemoglobin
gene from one species might have spread through the other. That would cause
the sequences of their hemoglobin genes to make the species seem more closely
related than they really are.
Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_02.10.ai Date 11-02-2016
Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_02.10.ai Date 11-02-2016
Ground Fox
Eastern gray
Tree 1
Western gray
(A) (B)
(C)
1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
Ground
Site:
Fox
Eastern gray
Western gray
ATT
123
ATT
ATA
ATA
A AT
456
A AT
AAA
A AT
GAA
ATT A ATGAA
789
GAT
GAA
ATT A AT GAA
GAA
1
2
3
4
Tree 2
1 3 2 4
Tree 3
1 4 2 3
ATT A ATGAA
FIGURE 2.10 A simple example illustrates the logic of one method of inferring phy-
logenies. (A) Four species of squirrels. The aim is to determine relationships among
three species of Sciurus (species 2, 3, and 4). The ground squirrel (Spermophilus citellus;
species 1) is an outgroup. (B) Hypothetical sequences of a small part of a hemoglobin
gene in the four species. Note the differences among the species at sites 3 and 9. (C)
There are three possible relationships (trees 1, 2, and 3) among the three ingroup taxa
(fox, eastern gray, and western gray squirrels). In tree 1, the red bar indicates the single
evolutionary change at site 3 from T to A in the ancestor of species 3 and 4 (eastern and
western gray squirrels). The blue bar in the species 2 lineage marks evolution from A to
T at site 9. Trees 2 and 3 would require us to suppose that evolutionary changes hap-
pened twice at site 3, shown by two red bars. Based on the assumption that each base
pair difference among the species evolved only once, tree 1 is the correct tree.
02_EVOL4E_CH02.indd 37 3/23/17 8:59 AM