Knowlet

Unit 4: Classification

History and Types of Classification

Plant classification systems have evolved from being based on simple, arbitrary traits to complex systems based on evolutionary relationships.

  1. Artificial Systems:
    • Based on one or a few, easily observable (but not necessarily related) characters.
    • Example: Linnaeus's "sexual system" (1735), which classified plants into 24 classes based only on the number and arrangement of stamens.
    • Advantage: Easy to use for identification (like a dictionary).
    • Disadvantage: Does not reflect natural relationships (e.g., plants that are unrelated were grouped together just because they had 5 stamens).
  2. Natural Systems:
    • Based on overall similarity, using as many morphological characters as possible (e.g., flower, fruit, leaf, stem).
    • Example: Bentham and Hooker's system (1862-1883).
    • Advantage: Groups related plants together, very practical for identification and herbarium organization.
    • Disadvantage: Based on similarity, not necessarily on evolutionary history (pre-Darwinian).
  3. Phylogenetic Systems:
    • Based on evolutionary relationships (phylogeny). They try to reconstruct the "family tree" of plants.
    • Example: Engler & Prantl (1887-1915), Takhtajan (1966), and the modern APG (Angiosperm Phylogeny Group) system.
    • Advantage: Scientifically most accurate, reflects evolutionary history.
    • Disadvantage: Can be complex; relationships are often based on non-visible (e.g., molecular) data.

Bentham and Hooker System

Published in Genera Plantarum (1862-1883), this is the most famous natural system of classification.

Outline:

  • Divided seed plants (Spermatophyta) into 3 classes:
    1. Dicotyledonae: (Two cotyledons, reticulate venation, taproot).
      • Sub-class 1. Polypetalae (Petals free) - e.g., Magnoliaceae
      • Sub-class 2. Gamopetalae (Petals fused) - e.g., Solanaceae
      • Sub-class 3. Monochlamydeae (Perianth in one whorl or absent) - e.g., Euphorbiaceae
    2. Gymnospermae: (Ovules naked) - e.g., Cycas, Pinus
    3. Monocotyledonae: (One cotyledon, parallel venation, fibrous roots) - e.g., Poaceae, Liliaceae

Merits and Demerits

Merits:

  • Very practical and easy to use for identification.
  • Based on detailed, direct observations of specimens.
  • Still used to organize herbaria in many parts of the world, including the Central National Herbarium (CAL) in India.

Demerits:

  • It is not phylogenetic. It does not incorporate evolution.
  • The placement of Gymnospermae between Dicots and Monocots is a major error.
  • The group "Monochlamydeae" is highly artificial; it groups unrelated plants based on a *loss* of petals.

Engler and Prantl System

Published in Die Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien (1887-1915), this was the first major phylogenetic system.

Outline:

  • Based on the idea that the "simplest" flowers (no petals, wind-pollinated, e.g., grasses) are the most primitive, and complex flowers (with petals, insect-pollinated) are advanced.
  • They placed Monocots *before* Dicots.

Merits and Demerits

Merits:

  • It was the first system to be intentionally based on evolutionary principles.
  • It treated families as the basic unit and provided keys and descriptions for all known plant genera.

Demerits:

  • Its central evolutionary hypothesis is now considered incorrect. We now know that "simple" flowers (like in grasses) are often derived from more complex ancestors (a simplification), and that large, many-parted flowers (like Magnolia) are more primitive.

Takhtajan System

A modern phylogenetic system (1966, with later revisions) that incorporates a wide range of evidence, including morphology, anatomy, embryology, and phytochemistry.

Outline:

  • Considers angiosperms to be monophyletic (having a single common ancestor).
  • Considers plants with large, many-parted, spiral flowers (like Magnolia) to be the most primitive.
  • Derives all other angiosperms from these ancestors through various evolutionary trends (e.g., fusion of parts, reduction in number of parts, zygomorphy).
  • This system (and the similar Cronquist system) is the basis for most modern, pre-molecular classifications.

Numerical Taxonomy (Phenetics)

A system of classification that aims to be objective by using mathematical methods and computer algorithms. It is not based on evolution, but on overall similarity.

Process:

  1. Select OTUs: Choose the "Operational Taxonomic Units" (e.g., the species you want to classify).
  2. Select Characters: Choose as many characters as possible (e.g., 100+).
    • Characters: e.g., "Leaf shape", "Petal color", "Stamen number".
    • Character Weighting: In pure phenetics, all characters are given equal weight to be objective.
    • Coding: Convert the characters into a numerical form (e.g., 0 = absent, 1 = present; or 1=red, 2=blue, 3=yellow).
  3. Cluster Analysis: A computer algorithm compares the coded data for all OTUs and calculates a "similarity coefficient" (a score of how similar each pair is).
  4. Generate Phenogram: The computer produces a tree-like diagram called a phenogram, which clusters the OTUs based on their similarity score.

Cladistics (Phylogenetic Systematics)

This is the dominant method used today to reconstruct evolutionary relationships. It was developed by Willi Hennig.

Principle: Cladistics classifies organisms based on phylogeny (evolutionary descent), not just similarity. It groups organisms that share a recent common ancestor.

Key Concepts:

  • Synapomorphy: A shared, derived character. This is the only type of character used to build a cladogram. It is an "evolutionary novelty" that a group inherited from their common ancestor (e.g., feathers in birds).
  • Clade: A group that includes a common ancestor and all of its descendants (a monophyletic group).
  • Paraphyletic Group: A group that includes an ancestor but not all of its descendants (e.g., "Reptiles" is paraphyletic because it doesn't include birds). Cladistics rejects these groups.
  • Polyphyletic Group: A group derived from more than one common ancestor (e.g., "Algae"). Cladistics rejects these groups.

Cladograms vs. Phenograms

Feature Phenogram (from Numerical Taxonomy) Cladogram (from Cladistics)
Basis Overall similarity (phenetic) Shared derived characters (phylogenetic)
What the branches mean The length represents the degree of similarity. The branching points (nodes) represent common ancestors.
Goal To group by similarity (objective). To reconstruct the evolutionary "family tree".

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