kenneth558 said:
I asked for something that should readily exist with our technology - DNA sequence evidence for gluadys' statementNotice her use of the phrase "at all". She obviously wasn't paying attention in Cellular Biology and Organic Evolution classes. I DID pay attention and saw that physical similarities are VERY MUCH taken into account in both hierarchies, and that the "molecular" evidence simply ignored DNA sequencing most of the time because it didn't give them the evidence they hoped it would. I don't expect you to believe me because you probably weren't attentive to those facts when you all took those courses. So be it.
i think gluadys is right and you don't understand what she said.
1. the linneaus taxonomy similiarities and differences create the trees we use to classify creatures by ....genus, species.
the basis is their morphological physical structures.
2. the second set of nested hierarchies are those, for example, created by
cytochromic C
list the sequence for a bunch of species then use a computer algorithm to determine the clades based on the simplest number of changes it takes to create each protein.
note: the second clade says nothing about physical anything. you can use any sets of proteins you want.
see:
http://www.people.virginia.edu/~wrp/papers/ismb2000.pdf
use blood globulins. use a dozen unrelated proteins etc. etc. you create these clades completely independent of whatever information you may have access too from trees created in step 1.
note: protein sequencing has given way to DNA sequencing for a number of reasons. the same kind of clades are derived in much the same matter. so the 2nd kind of clades are from both protein and DNA sequencing now.
likewise the 3rd one is independent of the first 2.
take the ERV's and create a clade based on where they are inserted and how much the ERV's themselves have mutated.
again, you use no data from step 1 or step 2 to create these clades.
are the clades independent?
your idea is that 1 and 2 are not independent since they are both based on the functions of the proteins in some ways. ok. as far as it goes*, but that doesn't change the independence of either the method or the data.
*if for example, you get to a taxonomic flowchart that asks you
"it is yellow or is it red?"
and in step 2, you are comparing the proteins responsible for red color and yellow color then there is a relationship between the clades derived from 1 and 2. however this is not what is generally either sequenced nor used for taxonomic differentiation. it is an insignificant problem, however, if you present evidence to the contrary, i'll read it.
however you will have to refer to the data not to generalities in your argument.
I DID pay attention and saw that physical similarities are VERY MUCH taken into account in both hierarchies,
so, show how this physical similarities are used to create type 2 clades, from protein and dna sequences.
and that the "molecular" evidence simply ignored DNA sequencing most of the time because it didn't give them the evidence they hoped it would.
specify the molecular evidence ignored. which sequences, which creatures, where we can go to follow your argument. that ought to be easy enough for it is
most of the time, however one example will suffice for our purposes of following your argument.
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