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Charles Darwin believed that phylogeny, the ascent of all species through time, was expressible as a metaphor he termed the Tree of Life. The modern development of this idea is called the Phylogenetic tree.
[edit] Early Trees of LifeAlthough the mutability of species may have appeared in paintings[1] and trees have been used as a methaphor for other purposes (Porphyrian tree) earlier than 1800, the combination of the concept of branching evolution and the tree image did not appear before 1800. The earliest tree of life was published by the French botanist Augustin Augier in 1801. It shows the relationships between members of the plant kingdom. It was not an evolutionary tree because a Creator was involved. Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829) produced the first branching tree of animals in his Philosophy zoologique (1809). It was an upside-down tree starting with worms and ending with mammals. No Creator was involved, so it is an evolutionary tree. However, Lamarck did not believe in common descent of all life. In stead, he believed that life consists of separate parallel lines advancing from simple to complex[2]. The American geologist Edward Hitchcock (1763–1864) published in 1840 the first Tree of Life based on paleontology in his Elementary Geology[3]. On the vertical axis are paleontological periods. Hitchcock made a separate tree for plants (left) and animals (right). The plant- and the animal tree are not connected at the bottom of the chart. Furthermore, each tree starts with multiple origins. Hitchcock's tree was more realistic than Darwin's 1859 theoretical tree (see below) because Hitchcock used real names in his trees. It is also true that Hitchcock's trees were branching trees. However, they were not real evolutionary trees, because Hitchcock believed that a deity was the agent of change. That was an important difference with Darwin. In 1858, a year before Darwin, the paleontologist Heinrich Georg Bronn (1800-1862) published a hypothetical tree labeled with letters. Although not a creationist, Bronn did not propose a mechanism of change. [edit] Darwin's Tree of LifeCharles Darwin (1809–1882) was the first to produce an evolutionary tree of life. He was very cautious about the possibility of reconstructing the history of life. In On the Origin of Species (1859) Chapter IV he presented an abstract diagram of a theoretical Tree of Life for species of an unnamed large genus (see figure). On the horizontal base line hypothetical species within this genus are labelled A – L and are spaced irregularly to indicate how distinct they are from each other, and are above broken lines at various angles suggesting that they have diverged from one or more common ancestors. On the vertical axis divisions labelled I – XIV each represent a thousand generations. From A, diverging lines show branching descent producing new varieties, some of which go extinct, so that after ten thousand generations descendants of A have become distinct new varieties or even sub-species a10, f10, and m10. Similarly, the descendants of I have diversified to become the new varieties w10 and z10. The process is extrapolated for a further four thousand generations so that the descendants of A and I become fourteen new species labelled a14 to z14. While F has continued for fourteen thousand generations relatively unchanged, species B,C,D,E,G,H,K and L have gone extinct. In Darwin's own words: "Thus the small differences distinguishing varieties of the same species, will steadily tend to increase till they come to equal the greater differences between species of the same genus, or even of distinct genera."[4]. This is a branching pattern with no names given to species, unlike the more linear tree Ernst Haeckel made years later (figure below) which includes the names of species and shows a more linear development from "lower" to "higher" species. In his summary to the section as revised in the 6th edition of 1872, Darwin explains his views on the Tree of Life:
[edit] Haeckel's Tree of LifeErnst Haeckel (1834 - 1919) constructed several Trees of Life. Left is shown the first sketch of the famous Haeckel's Tree of Life in the 1860s which shows "Pithecanthropus alalus" as the ancestor of Homo sapiens. In the middle is the Tree of Life from Generelle Morphologie der Organismen (1866) with three kingdoms Plantae, Protista and Animalia. On the right is the 'Pedigree of Man' published in The Evolution of Man (1879). [edit] The tree of life todayThe model is still considered valid for eukaryotic life forms. The earliest branch of the eukaryote tree yields four supergroups: Plants (green and red algae, and plants), Unikonts (amoebas, fungi, and all animals—including humans), Excavates (free-living organisms and parasites), and SAR (a recently identified main group, abbreviated from Stramenopiles, Alveolates, and Rhizaria, the names of some of its members)[6]. Biologists now recognize, that the prokaryotes, the bacteria and archaea , have the ability to transfer genetic information between unrelated organisms through Horizontal gene transfer (HGT). Recombination, gene loss, duplication, and gene creation are a few of the processes by which genes can be transferred within and between bacterial and archael species, causing variation that’s not due to vertical transfer.[7] [8] There is emerging evidence of HGT occurring within the prokaryotes at the single and multicell level and the view is now emerging that the tree of life gives an incomplete picture of life's evolution. It was a useful tool in understanding the basic processes of evolution but cannot explain the full complexity of the situation.[8] [edit] See also[edit] Footnotes
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[edit] External links
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