[Taxacom] Paraphyletic groups as natural units of biological classification
John Grehan
calabar.john at gmail.com
Sat Sep 27 08:59:36 CDT 2014
Ken,
Since you have some expertise and strong opinions on paraphyly I presume
you have read the citation of Stuessy (2010) on basal angiosperms being a
paraphyletic group. As I do not have immediate access to that paper perhaps
you could describe in what way that group was paraphyletic.
Thanks,
John Grehan
On Thu, Sep 25, 2014 at 8:52 PM, Kenneth Kinman <kinman at hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> Dear All, I was just rereading a 2010 paper by
> Horandl and Stuessy (published in the journal Taxon). It should be
> required reading in any systematics course. Below is the abstract.
> --------------------Ken
> Hörandl, E. & Stuessy, T.F. 2010. Paraphyletic groups as natural units
> ofbiological classification. Taxon 59: 1641-1653.
>
> ABSTRACT:
> Despite the broad acceptance of phylogenetic principles in
> biologicalclassification, a fundamental question still exists on how to
> classifyparaphyletic groups. Much of the controversy appears due to (1)
> historicalshifts in terminology and definitions, (2) neglect of focusing on
> evolutionaryprocesses for understanding origins of natural taxa, (3) a
> narrow perspective ondimensions involved with reconstructing phylogeny, and
> (4) acceptance of lowerlevels of information content and practicability as
> a trade-off for ease ofarriving at formal classifications. Monophyly in
> evolutionary biology originallyhad a broader definition, that of describing
> a group with common ancestry. Thisdefinition thus includes both
> paraphyletic and monophyletic groups in the senseof Hennig. We advocate
> returning to a broader definition, supporting use ofAshlock's term
> holophyly as replacement for monophyly s.str. By reviewingprocesses
> involved in the production of phylogenetic patterns (budding, merging,and
> splitting), we demonstrate that paraphyly is a natural transitional stage
> inthe evolution of taxa, and that it occurs regularly along with holophyly.
> When a new holophyletic group arises, it usually coexists for some time
> with itsparaphyletic stem group. Paraphyly and holophyly, therefore,
> representrelational and temporal evolutionary stages. Paraphyletic groups
> exist at alllevels of diversification in all kingdoms of eukaryotes, and
> they havetraditionally been recognized because of their descent-based
> similarity. Wereview different methodological approaches for recognition of
> monophyleticgroups s.l. (i.e., both holophyletic and paraphyletic), which
> are essential fordiscriminating from polyphyly that is unacceptable in
> classification. Forarriving at taxonomic decisions, natural processes,
> information content, andpracticability are essential criteria. We stress
> using shared descent as aprimary grouping principle, but also emphasize the
> importance of degrees ofdivergence plus similarity (cohesiveness of
> evolutionary features) as additionalcriteria for classification.
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Taxacom Mailing List
> Taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
> http://mailman.nhm.ku.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/taxacom
> The Taxacom Archive back to 1992 may be searched at:
> http://taxacom.markmail.org
>
> Celebrating 27 years of Taxacom in 2014.
>
More information about the Taxacom
mailing list