All Things
Classifying living beings: Cladistics or complexity levels
|
The tree of life |
Since Aristotle, living beings have been classified in kingdoms. At first there were two: plants, practically unmoving, and animals, capable of active movement.
When Antony van Leeuwenhoek discovered microorganisms, biologists tried to maintain this two-fold division, integrating some with animals (amoebas and Paramecium), others with plants (bacteria and microscopic algae and fungi). But at that level, the separation between animals and plants is blurry, and in the mid twentieth century a third kingdom was added to the other two: protists, unicellular living beings.
A little later, biologists came to the conclusion that the kingdom of plants should be divided into two: fungi at one side, all the other plats (metaphyta) at the other. By 1975, therefore, there were four different kingdoms.
In the eighties, a new way of classifying living beings was proposed: cladistics. The emphasis on molecular biology and DNA analysis changed how taxonomies were interpreted, making them subdivisions of the tree of life, a graphical depiction of evolution.
Some biologists have pushed the cladistic ideas to the extreme, requiring that every biological taxon must be a strict sub-tree of the tree of life (or a branch of the tree). This restriction, which at first light appears reasonable, would have serious consequences:
- Many classic taxons of animals and plants would disappear: all those which gave rise to another group at the same taxonomic level. For instance, bony fishes (because they are ancestors of terrestrial vertebrates); amphibians (ancestors of reptiles); reptiles (ancestors of birds and mammals). In strict cladistic classifications, those three groups would find no place.
- On the other hand, if animals, metaphyta and fungi are accepted as kingdoms, any other group of living beings located in independent branches of the tree of life that appeared before those kingdoms would also have to be a kingdom. There would thus be over fifty kingdoms of living beings, most of which one-celled, some with just a few species.
- Finally, fungi (and probably metaphyta) would be decomposed into several kingdoms, because they would be polyphyletic. The meaning of kingdom as a large subset of life would thus be lost.
A fundamental datum of evolution is forgotten here: the fact that life has gone through several critical thresholds which give rise to new levels of complexity. Passing through a critical threshold should be equivalent to changing kingdoms, whether the result is a sub-tree or not. In fact, usually it won?t be. If we apply this criterion, living beings would be classified into five kingdoms:
- Prokaryote (one-celled with no nuclei), further divided into two sub-kingdoms: archaea and bacteria.
- Eukaryote (one-celled with nuclei), which appeared from the symbiosis (common life) of bacteria and archaea.
- Fungi, mostly unmoving multi-cellular beings with no photosynthesis, which came from the symbiosis of a group of eukaryote.
- Metaphyta, mostly unmoving multi-cellular beings with photosynthesis, which came from the symbiosis of another group of eukaryote.
- Animals (or metazoa), mostly moving multi-cellular beings with no photosynthesis, which came from the symbiosis of a third group of eukaryote.
If the rules of the strictest cladists were applied, only the last would be considered a kingdom, and even this would be doubtful, as it could be polyphyletic, if sponges had an independent origin.
The same post in Spanish
Manuel Alfonseca
-
Is Man Just An Animal?
Theodosius DobzhanskyModern biologists frequently say that man is not special, that we are just a species among many. Thus, for instance, Colin Tudge writes this:Phylogenetically we are an outpost, a tiny figment of life, just as Earth is a cosmological...
-
Sex And Species, Two Related Concepts
Taxonomic categoriesThe species is the basic taxonomic category used by biologists to classify living things. The other categories (genus, family, order, class and phylum) are considered artificial and arbitrary. On the other hand, we tend to regard the...
-
Outstanding Problems In The History Of Life
Gregor MendelIn a previous article I wrote about the origin of life and related problems. That is only the first of the outstanding issues regarding evolution. There are many more, for we are far from having an explanation for everything that happened...
-
What Is Life?
Saccharomyces cerevisiaeAfter a century discussing about the origin of life, we are not closer to knowing what did happen. In the mid-twentieth century, when Stanley Lloyd Miller performed the famous experiment where he applied energy to a mixture of...
-
What Is Man?
Since about one century ago, after the consolidation of evolutionist theories, and getting from them philosophical consequences without a scientific basis, many biologists assert that man is an animal like any other, one between millions of species of...
All Things