*30 points* please give content quality Answer
Attachments:
Answers
Answered by
0
HELLO FRIEND HERE IS YOUR ANSWER,,,,,,,,
New systematics which were introduced by Sir Julian Huxley is
Cladistics are used to determine ancestral evolutionary relations with present relations on different species. Simply said they're containing tree diagrams for representative samples for this, done to effectively know how was the evolution occurring and is pretty accurate.
Basically it does so by checking phylogenetic similarities or by a commonest phylogeny from a originating point or from where it all started or from a common ancestral point.
We can actually split these things into two main categories of characters that are, Derived characters and Ancestral Characters.
Ancestral characters are some incurred traits of a simple or a basic body design which can be presented in a entirety of the groups in a particular gistfully patterned manner.
Derived traits (as far as I remember) are traits consisting of those specific structures and functions which are completely or having a small difference from previously said Ancestral Characters. They're appearing in the phase of evolutionary changes which further cause a formation in newly created or new subgroups.
In cladistics or cladistic taxonomical Hierarchy every step of evolutionary phase continues and gives a new branching.
Every member of that branch will show the possession of a derived trait character and will be devoid of any character (in derived character) below it's branching point (from where it descends).
Arrangement for organisms are actually done through a specific basis criteria on "How" they share the similarity "rate" or "derived trait characters" which are varying in different levels for wide varieties of Ancestral characters, this continues to form a special series comparisons for different individualistic characteristics in a fully nested or say branched in proper manner which is capable enough to identify most of the characteristics in a series for each and every taxon present in it, this is properly and systematically arranged based on their similar characters on a , which is a phylogenetic tree structure for organising taxa on that basis.
HOPE THIS DETAILED VERSION HELPS YOU!
New systematics which were introduced by Sir Julian Huxley is
Cladistics are used to determine ancestral evolutionary relations with present relations on different species. Simply said they're containing tree diagrams for representative samples for this, done to effectively know how was the evolution occurring and is pretty accurate.
Basically it does so by checking phylogenetic similarities or by a commonest phylogeny from a originating point or from where it all started or from a common ancestral point.
We can actually split these things into two main categories of characters that are, Derived characters and Ancestral Characters.
Ancestral characters are some incurred traits of a simple or a basic body design which can be presented in a entirety of the groups in a particular gistfully patterned manner.
Derived traits (as far as I remember) are traits consisting of those specific structures and functions which are completely or having a small difference from previously said Ancestral Characters. They're appearing in the phase of evolutionary changes which further cause a formation in newly created or new subgroups.
In cladistics or cladistic taxonomical Hierarchy every step of evolutionary phase continues and gives a new branching.
Every member of that branch will show the possession of a derived trait character and will be devoid of any character (in derived character) below it's branching point (from where it descends).
Arrangement for organisms are actually done through a specific basis criteria on "How" they share the similarity "rate" or "derived trait characters" which are varying in different levels for wide varieties of Ancestral characters, this continues to form a special series comparisons for different individualistic characteristics in a fully nested or say branched in proper manner which is capable enough to identify most of the characteristics in a series for each and every taxon present in it, this is properly and systematically arranged based on their similar characters on a , which is a phylogenetic tree structure for organising taxa on that basis.
HOPE THIS DETAILED VERSION HELPS YOU!
Answered by
0
the correct answer option B
Similar questions
Social Sciences,
7 months ago
Math,
1 year ago
Math,
1 year ago
English,
1 year ago
Math,
1 year ago