Cirbryn
He's just this guy, you know
- Feb 10, 2005
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Note: this post, as well as the one immediately preceding, are in response to post 357. The tree of brown bear mitochondrial DNA discussed herein is reproduced in post 355. I realize the quote boxes in this post are a bit messed up. I've tried taking out the internal close-quotes but the system keeps putting them back.
I think this merely emphasizes my point that the cladistic crusade against paraphyletic groups leads to unnecessarily awkward naming conventions. The cladistic system allows us to identify a clade beginnng at any point in the lineage, but to avoid paraphyly any clade so identified must include the entire lineage from that point. So if the animals sharing specific characteristics and identified in the Linnaean system as Morganucodontidae occurred from point A to point B in the lineage leading to us, cladistics would allow us to name a clade going from point A to us, and one from point B to us, but not a group going from point A to point B. You are instead forced to refer to them as cynodonts (which is hardly helpful since cynodonts, by cladistic standards, would include the entire lineage starting well before the morganucodonts), or else to bring in unofficial conversational understandings that are unclear and that cant be employed in published papers. Under the Linnaean system, I can write that the morganucodont articular bone had not yet detached from the dentary. Under the cladistic system I cant say that; unless it turns out morganucodonts arent on the direct line leading to later mammals after all, in which case I can say it again.
No you cant under a cladistic system. Naming paraphyletic groups is verboten. Thats why youre having such a problem with the fact that monkeys is paraphyletic.
Since brown bears refers to a particular species, it is specific not generic, in both senses of both words. Brown bear is the English name for Ursus arctos. Youre saying that polar bears (Ursus maritimus) are members of Ursus arctos, by virtue of their phylogeny, and that the fact that maritimus and arctos no longer interbreed extensively in the wild makes no difference. (Interbreeding being one of those characters that according to you dont matter in the least). By this reasoning speciation could never occur. A daughter species would always remain the same species as its parent, and we would remain the same species as the first to ever appear on the planet.
Your link only shows a single instance of current interbreeding involving a polar bear mother and a brown bear father. (Grizzlies are a subspecies of brown bear). It doesnt demonstrate interbreeding in the past at a level sufficient to explain the mtDNA sequences (which, for one thing, would have to have involved brown bear mothers and polar bear fathers). The point I was getting at is that by cladistic reasoning wed have to claim polar bears were the same species as brown bears based on the mtDNA sequences; but we might change our minds later if evidence of earlier limited interbreeding came up that could explain the sequences; but we might change our minds again after that if another gene showed similarities indicating descent from brown bears in addition to the interbreeding; etc. So not only does cladistics ignore speciation, it leaves species in a nomenclatural limbo where their names are subject to change from day to day.
Cirbryn said:Other such characteristics might reflect adaptations for particular niches or environments, as with cetaceans, or polar bears, or mosasaurs; or simply reflect body plans that were important phylogenetic starting points, such as the morganucodontids. How would a cladist identify the morganucodontids?Aron-Ra said:As Cynodontids, if not simply as therians. But Morganuconodonts may work just as well when you subtract them out of the parent group.Aron-Ra said:"Although they are one of the earliest groups of mammals, its not possible to say whether they went entirely extinct or whether they are in fact the ancestors of any of the other, later groups of mammals." --BBC; Walking with Prehistoric Beasts
Just to clarify for you once again, if it appears that our lineage is rooted in that one, then we are Morgauonodonts. However, if I speak of them with no further clarifiers, I will likely be referring to the stem rather than the whole of the clade. The reason is as SLP explained; the amount of information. If I'm speaking of more modern forms, I can identify them more precisely by saying 'Eutherian' than simply 'Therians' alone.
I think this merely emphasizes my point that the cladistic crusade against paraphyletic groups leads to unnecessarily awkward naming conventions. The cladistic system allows us to identify a clade beginnng at any point in the lineage, but to avoid paraphyly any clade so identified must include the entire lineage from that point. So if the animals sharing specific characteristics and identified in the Linnaean system as Morganucodontidae occurred from point A to point B in the lineage leading to us, cladistics would allow us to name a clade going from point A to us, and one from point B to us, but not a group going from point A to point B. You are instead forced to refer to them as cynodonts (which is hardly helpful since cynodonts, by cladistic standards, would include the entire lineage starting well before the morganucodonts), or else to bring in unofficial conversational understandings that are unclear and that cant be employed in published papers. Under the Linnaean system, I can write that the morganucodont articular bone had not yet detached from the dentary. Under the cladistic system I cant say that; unless it turns out morganucodonts arent on the direct line leading to later mammals after all, in which case I can say it again.
Cirbryn said:Are you even allowed to utter such a paraphyletic name as that?
Cirbryn said:Aron-Ra said:I can say anything I want, as long as it is understood what that means.
No you cant under a cladistic system. Naming paraphyletic groups is verboten. Thats why youre having such a problem with the fact that monkeys is paraphyletic.
Cirbryn said:Or how about the studies of brown bear mitochondrial DNA (recounted in Molecular Markers, Natural History and Evolution, John Avise, 2004) that found six geographically separate "Phylogroups" (intraspecific clades), one of which that of southeastern Alaska had DNA so similar to polar bears as to indicate polar bears were members of that group? So before the study there were brown bears and polar bears and after the study there are just brown brown bears and white brown bears?Aron-Ra said:What about them? If it were that polar bears emerged from within "brown" bears (as generic a name as one can have) then yes, polar bears would be brown bears that are white. Coincidentally, I also know a man named Green, but he's not. Once again, the characters don't matter in the least. Only the phylogeny is important.
Since brown bears refers to a particular species, it is specific not generic, in both senses of both words. Brown bear is the English name for Ursus arctos. Youre saying that polar bears (Ursus maritimus) are members of Ursus arctos, by virtue of their phylogeny, and that the fact that maritimus and arctos no longer interbreed extensively in the wild makes no difference. (Interbreeding being one of those characters that according to you dont matter in the least). By this reasoning speciation could never occur. A daughter species would always remain the same species as its parent, and we would remain the same species as the first to ever appear on the planet.
Cirbryn said:What if another study of some other genetic region indicates greater separation, or suggests the similarity of the first study was merely due to a limited instance of past interbreeding?Aron-Ra said:That was the explanation as I remember it. What of it?
Your link only shows a single instance of current interbreeding involving a polar bear mother and a brown bear father. (Grizzlies are a subspecies of brown bear). It doesnt demonstrate interbreeding in the past at a level sufficient to explain the mtDNA sequences (which, for one thing, would have to have involved brown bear mothers and polar bear fathers). The point I was getting at is that by cladistic reasoning wed have to claim polar bears were the same species as brown bears based on the mtDNA sequences; but we might change our minds later if evidence of earlier limited interbreeding came up that could explain the sequences; but we might change our minds again after that if another gene showed similarities indicating descent from brown bears in addition to the interbreeding; etc. So not only does cladistics ignore speciation, it leaves species in a nomenclatural limbo where their names are subject to change from day to day.
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