phylogeny
read the instructions and read a research paper the is in the instructions , and answer the questions carefully and correctly please
This assignment must be completed individually.
Name as on OneCard: ________________________
TA name: ______________________ Section: ________________
BIOL 111 Phylogenetics homework (10 points)
Due in lab week 14 (30 Nov – 3 Dec)
Using the skills you learned in the library session in Week 1, locate and download the
following paper (this will work best from an on-campus location):
Berenbrink, M., Koldkjaer, P., Kepp, O. and Cossins, A. R. (2005). Evolution of
oxygen secretion in fishes and the emergence of a complex physiological system. Science
307, 1752-1757.
This paper is an excellent and very well-reasoned example of how phylogenetic trees can
be used to test evolutionary hypotheses (in particular, see the text near the bottom of
page 1756). Although you certainly may not understand all of the physiological details
and figures, you should be able to interpret some of the key findings in the data,
particularly in the phylogenetic trees themselves.
Background information:
This very interesting paper was published in one of the two premier scientific journals in
the world (the other being Nature). The paper describes a hypothesis for the
evolutionary patterns of development of a major physiological innovation in fishes, namely
the ability to secrete oxygen gas from the circulating blood into an organ called the
swimbladder. A swimbladder is a gas-filled structure that can be used by a fish to
regulate its buoyancy. (As you will learn, the swimbladder is homologous to our lungs.) At a
certain depth, the buoyant force of the swimbladder equals the force of gravity pulling
the fish toward the bottom of the sea; at this depth the fish no longer needs to expend
energy staying at a constant depth. Prior to this evolutionary innovation, fishes
possessing a swimbladder could only inflate the swimbladder by gulping air at the surface
of the water, and those species without a swimbladder (such as sharks) must swim
continuously – and continuously expend energy – to generate lift to stay at a constant
depth.
The Root effect is a property of the hemoglobin of certain fish species. Hemoglobin is
the respiratory pigment produced by humans and fishes in their red blood cells that
carries oxygen to the tissues. Essentially, the Root effect is a significant decrease in the
ability of hemoglobin molecules to bind to oxygen molecules when the pH of the blood
decreases (in other words, when there are more H+ ions floating around in the blood).
A rete mirabile (“wonderful net”) is a bundle of very small veins and arteries flowing in
opposite directions to each other. The physiological “beauty” of a rete mirabile is that it
can be used to recycle or otherwise retain something in a particular region of the body.
In this case, dissolved oxygen – released from hemoglobin due to the Root effect – is
retained near the swimbladder. Fish take advantage of this arrangement of blood vessels
to increase their ability to inflate the swimbladder with oxygen gas. In the eye of some
fishes, another rete mirabile (the choroid rete) helps to supply oxygen to the retina,
which does not have a dense network of capillaries and is thus not well-oxygenated.
Instructions for reading scientific papers:
Read through the paper once without stopping. Focus on the main points and don’t worry
about terms you don’t understand. Then read the paper a second time, stopping to make
notes, to look up terms that are unfamiliar to you, and to look closely at the data
presented in the figures and tables.
Questions to answer:
After reading the paper, answer the following questions, referring especially to the
phylogenetic tree on p. 1753 (Figure 1):
1. How many times did the swimbladder rete mirabile originate? ________
2. How many times did the choroid rete mirabile originate? ______________
3. How many times was the swimbladder rete mirabile secondarily lost? __________
4. The blue pattern of evolution of the swimbladder rete mirabile in the figure is an
example of evolutionary:
a. Diversification
b. Copying
c. Convergence
d. Homology
5. What advantages do fishes that possess the oxygen-inflation mechanism for the
swimbladder enjoy over other fishes lacking this mechanism?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
6. Which originated later: the Root effect or the rete mirabile? _______________
7. Did the most recent common ancestor of Brycinus and Pelteobagrus possess a
swimbladder rete mirabile? ____________
Did it possess a choroid rete mirabile? ___________
8. In what way is the MRCA of the clade containing Gnathonemus and its sister taxon
unusual relative to other clades, specifically with reference to the
presence/absence of retes? ___________________________________
____________________________________________________________
9. The Platichthys are a group of flatfishes (such as flounders) that have secondarily
lost the swimbladder rete mirabile and, in many cases, the swimbladder structure
itself. Knowing this and the benefits of having a swimbladder, where would you be
most likely to find this group of animals in the ocean?
a. On the bottom
b. Swimming near the surface
c. Hovering in the midwater
10. To which group are humans (in the group Homo) most closely related:
a. Sharks (the clade containing Scyliorhinus, Mustelus, and Squalus)
b. Salmon and trout (Oncorhynchus)
c. Xenopus
11. Sharks do not contain a swimbladder, and we mentioned above that the
swimbladder is homologous to our lungs. Draw a simplified version of the tree from
the paper below, and indicate on the tree where the swimbladder/lung must have
originated. (+1 if correct)