[Taxacom] Elimination of paraphyly: sensible or not?

Mary Barkworth Mary.Barkworth at usu.edu
Thu Feb 8 19:32:32 CST 2018


But lumping (wide scoped supraspecific taxa) can also result in loss of understanding. There are no magic answers. Your wide scoping is my lumping and potential death by nomenclature - failure to identify the subsumed taxa into subsequent studies and/or failure to include them because they are not distinct.
Mary

-----Original Message-----
From: Taxacom [mailto:taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of Stephen Thorpe
Sent: Friday, February 9, 2018 4:22 AM
To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu; Michael A. Ivie <mivie at montana.edu>
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] Elimination of paraphyly: sensible or not?

At any rate, the basic problem appears to be that "understanding" is always inconclusive and in flux (and may not even be able to be defined very precisely if you mean some sort of collective understanding by the entire scientific community). So, the question is how much inconclusivity and/or flux do we want in taxonomic classification? My preference is to try to minimise it. I would go for more wide scoped supraspecific taxa (genera, families, etc.) There is nothing worse than oversplitting of genera, etc. This just leads to more instability as a result of phylogenetic studies.

Stephen

--------------------------------------------
On Fri, 9/2/18, Michael A. Ivie <mivie at montana.edu> wrote:

 Subject: Re: [Taxacom] Elimination of paraphyly: sensible or not?
 To: "Stephen Thorpe" <stephen_thorpe at yahoo.co.nz>, taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
 Received: Friday, 9 February, 2018, 2:09 PM
 
 OK, I misunderstood you, but you
 misunderstood me as well.  "... in the  face of ever advancing understanding of the  evolution of life on earth" 
 is not
 meant to be just phylogenetics, but all aspects of biology  that  is bring more and more sense to the  universe every day (expect in  understanding  voting patterns or political motivations).
 
 Mike
 
 
 On 2/8/2018 6:02 PM, Stephen
 Thorpe wrote:
 > Mike said: "... in
 the face of ever advancing understanding of the evolution of  life on earth"
 >
 > It is a moot point whether
 cladistics/phylogenetics does in fact advance understanding  of the evolution of life on earth! It seems to me to be  little more than a paint by numbers approach which can in  theory be replicated by anyone else who uses the same  character weightings, etc., but replicability alone does not  imply that we are actually advancing understanding of the  evolution of life on earth"!
 >
 > You also misunderstood my comments about  retaining birds and mammals as named taxa. They ARE  monophyletic, and I didn't say to necessarily retain  them as taxa of equal rank to reptiles (so subtaxa of  reptiles are indeed fine to me also), I just meant that we  don't want to simply dump them into reptiles such that  Reptilia simply contains various subtaxa from each in a way  that doesn't group bird (or mammal) subtaxa together  under a name.
 >
 >
 I'm surprised that anyone finds "interesting"
 the inconclusive and ephemeral results of phylogenetic  studies!
 >
 >
 Stephen
 >
 >
 --------------------------------------------
 > On Fri, 9/2/18, Michael A. Ivie <mivie at montana.edu>
 wrote:
 >
 >   Subject:
 Re: [Taxacom] Elimination of paraphyly: sensible or not?
 >   To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
 >   Received: Friday, 9 February, 2018,
 12:56 PM
 >
 >   Hi
 Stephan,
 >
 >   It
 seems to me that you have this premise
 >   backwards.  Rather than there
 >   being a
 >   cabal
 of rabid cladists obsessed with eliminating paraphyly,  >   I  >   think there  is a cabal of rabid  >   revanchists  obsessed with hanging on to  >   familiar  paraphyletic taxa in the face of ever  >
  advancing understanding
 >   of the
 evolution of
 >   life on earth.  In
 actual practice, most advocates
 >   of a
 monophyly standard continue to use and
 >   propose taxa that cannot be
 >   shown to be
 >
 monophyletic, but if we have evidence, why not use it?
 >
 >   You say
 "We wish to
 >   retain birds and
 also mammals as useful monophyletic
 >
 taxa, for obvious reasons."  How, if you  >   mean as  >  nomenclaturally-recognized taxa at  >   a  level equal to reptiles, is this  >  obvious,  >   or to be wished for?  We  have the words "birds"
 >   and
 "mammals"
 >   for the folk
 >   taxonomy, but why not recognize them  for what they really  >  >   are? Subtaxa of Reptiles works fine  for  >   me.
 >
 >   As for why look for
 >   monophyletic lineages?  Because
 scientifically,
 >   doing phylogenetics
 is INTERESTING.  I myself
 >   do mostly
 alpha taxonomy,
 >   because I
 >   don't have the skill set to be a
 leading
 >   phylogeneticist, but
 >   I find their results
 >   to be very thought provoking,
 interesting and even
 >   exciting.  It
 is not that they get too much
 >
 funding, it is that
 >   faunistics and
 taxonomy
 >   get to little.
 >
 >   Mike
 >
 >
 >
 >   On
 >   2/8/2018 3:07 PM, Stephen Thorpe
 wrote:
 >   >
 >
 Hi all,
 >   > I have been giving some
 thought
 >   to the cladistic obsession
 of eliminating paraphyly in
 >
 taxonomic classification. For many taxa (above species),  the  >   subtaxa consist of one or more  clearly monophyletic groups,  >   plus a  possibly paraphyletic residue (i.e. no apomorphies to  >   bind the residue together into a  monophylum). So, if we must  >  eliminate paraphyly (or possible paraphyly), the only  >   options are to either: (1) subsume the  monophyletic subtaxa  >   into the  paraphyletic residue; or (2) break up the  >   paraphyletic residue into monophyletic  subtaxa. Effectively  >   the two options  may actually be equivalent. An example might  >   help to illustrate my point. Let's  take a simplistic  >   view of reptiles  as scaly tetrapods, birds as feathery  >
  winged bipeds derived from reptiles, and mammals as  hairy  >   tetrapods derived from  reptiles. So, amniotes (reptiles,  >  birds and mammals) are a monophyletic group, as are birds  >   and also mammals, but not reptiles  (reptiles being the  >  "paraphyletic residue"). We wish to retain  birds  >   and also mammals as useful  monophyletic taxa, for obvious  >  reasons. So, what to do? Luckily, within reptiles there  are  >   some monophyletic subgroups of  sufficient diversity to be  >   useful,  but this might not have been the case if all  >   reptiles were just basically  "skinks", with only  >  species or perhaps also generic differences between them.
 >   Had this been so, amniotes would have  to be taxonomically  >   split between  numerous (maybe hundreds) virtually identical  >   taxa of "skinks", plus birds  and also mammals as  >   just two taxa at  the same level (not necessarily a ranked  >   level, but direct child taxa of  amniotes). Would this be a  >   useful  classification of amniotes? I suggest that it would  >   be far more useful to recognise a  single paraphyletic taxon  >   of  reptiles (all the "skinks" in the hypothetical  >   example), plus birds and also mammals  (i.e. just 3 direct  >   child taxa of  amniotes). I wonder for plants, fungi and also  >   invertebrates, if there might be many  taxa analogous to the  >   above  hypothetical example, with a paraphyletic residue  >   consisting of hundreds of  "skinks", but also with  >  just one or two very distinct and diverse monophyletic  >   subtaxa? If so, would it be sensible to  eliminate paraphyly  >   or best just to  live with a known paraphyletic residue as a  >   unified subtaxon? Given the amount of  limited resources  >   which are being  allocated to projects to eliminate  >  paraphyly, to the detriment of alpha taxonomy, it would  be  >   nice to think that there was a  clearly good reason for the  >  elimination of paraphyly, but I'm not so sure that  there  >   is! The usual argument seems  to be that you cannot make  >  meaningful predictions from paraphyletic taxa, but how  much  >   biology does rely on the making  of predictions based on  >   taxon  membership, and what proportion of those predictions  >   end up being true anyway? For example,  you might predict  >   that a newly  discovered braconid is a parasitoid, but a few  >   braconids are phytophagous anyway. So,  I guess that the main  >   question that  I am posing is whether we think that the  >   benefits of monophyly justify the  spending of so much  >   limited  resources on the elimination of paraphyly? Perhaps  >   the elimination of paraphyly is being  driven instead by  >   economic factors,  doing phylogenies being a more cost  >  efficient way for institutional scientists to spend their  >   time on than alpha taxonomy?
 >   >
 >   Stephen
 >   >
 >
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 __________________________________________________
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 Ivie, Ph.D.,
 >   F.R.E.S.
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 >
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 >
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 >
 >
 >
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 --
 __________________________________________________
 
 Michael A. Ivie, Ph.D.,
 F.R.E.S.
 
 NOTE: two
 addresses with different Zip Codes depending on carriers
 
 US Post Office Address:
 Montana Entomology Collection
 Marsh Labs, Room 50
 PO Box
 173145
 Montana State University
 Bozeman, MT 59717
 USA
 
 UPS, FedEx, DHL Address:
 Montana Entomology Collection
 Marsh Labs, Room 50
 1911 West
 Lincoln Street
 Montana State University
 Bozeman, MT 59718
 USA
 
 
 (406)
 994-4610 (voice)
 (406) 994-6029 (FAX)
 mivie at montana.edu
 
 
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