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cladistics |
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cladisticsMethod of biological classification that uses a formal step-by-step procedure for objectively assessing the extent to which organisms share particular characteristics, and for assigning them to taxonomic groups called clades. Clades comprise all the species descended from a known or inferred common ancestor plus the ancestor itself, and may be large – consisting of a hierarchy of other clades. The cladistic method of classification was proposed by German teacher and entomologist Willi Hennig (1913–1976) in 1950, though his ideas did not gain currency until his work was translated into English in 1966.
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Systematists analyze phylogenetic relationships among groups of organisms at increasingly fine levels of detail, thus increasing the tension between cladistic analysis and classificatory systems. Evolutionary relationships between 15 Plasmodium species from Old and New World primates (including humans): a 18S rDNA cladistic analysis. However, Wood and Collard's cladistic analysis of skeletal traits places chimps, gorillas, and orangutans along closely related evolutionary branches, with people on a more distant limb. |
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