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Quiz about Phylogenetics
Quiz about Phylogenetics

Phylogenetics Trivia Quiz


A quiz on phylogenetics and some clades/classifications of animals. If you don't know some of these words, then take the quiz and (hopefully) learn something new! Enjoy!

A multiple-choice quiz by IronCretin. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
IronCretin
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
261,774
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
831
Last 3 plays: Guest 130 (4/10), Guest 73 (6/10), Guest 169 (4/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. Phylogenetics is best described as: Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. What is a monophyletic group? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Which one of these groups are humans not monophyletic to? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Phylogenetics are best represented, visually, by: Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Which living groups of animals are birds most closely related to? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. Which of these is a general description of a polyphyletic group? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Which one of these groups is not like the others? Remember, we are talking about phylogenetics, so one of these groupings is different! Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Parsimony is? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Which one of these groups do humans NOT belong to? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Monotremes, such as the egg-laying billed platypus, belong to which of the following clades? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Apr 14 2024 : Guest 130: 4/10
Mar 04 2024 : Guest 73: 6/10
Mar 01 2024 : Guest 169: 4/10
Feb 26 2024 : Guest 206: 6/10

Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Phylogenetics is best described as:

Answer: The study of the evolutionary development of a population of organisms.

The correct answer is the study of an organism's evolutionary development. Essentially, phylogenetics takes into account the ancestors of an organism, its genetics, and its derived traits. Sounds pretty nerdy to some, but it's pretty cool to others. A phylum is a clade (a clade is any group of organisms: kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species or 'King Philip Called Olivia For Great Sex'), which does pertain to phylogenetics, but is not the best answer.

A system of naming organisms is actually the Linnean system, named after Carl von Linne. This is (more or less) the format that is used for all species names (specifically, the binomial name system: Genus species). Finally, coprophagy is the ingestion of one's own faeces (poo). This is practiced by organisms such as the rabbit and the koala, primarily to maintain the commensal bacteria that help break down the cellulose in their food (plants).
2. What is a monophyletic group?

Answer: A group that descends from a common ancestor.

Yes, this grouping does exist! Monogamy is practiced by many animals, but is unrelated (except for the prefix). Asexual mating has nothing to do with the question, but is the term for organisms that divide to reproduce (several types of invertebrates do reproduce in this manner).
3. Which one of these groups are humans not monophyletic to?

Answer: Humans are derived from all of these clades.

Yes, it's true, all of these groups are along mankind's evolutionary tree. lobe-finned fish are theorised to be the first group to journey onto land and became tetrapods. Placental mammals are all mammals that birth live young, and have gestation within the organism with a placenta. Finally, primates are. . . well, primates, and include gibbons, siamangs, baboons, orang-utans, and gorillas, oh, and mankind, of course.

A favourite food of orang-utans is the durian, also called the 'King of Fruits.' This thing is has major spikes, kind of like a coconut crossed with a mace! The flesh inside is textured almost like custard.
4. Phylogenetics are best represented, visually, by:

Answer: Phylogenetic trees and cladograms: these show the links between organisms and their development.

Well, they're not REALLY trees! Trees are employed by most scientists. These allow an expanding set of traits, while showing a progression towards a set of organisms (most trees would go from generalists to more specialised creatures). One of the early incarnations of phylogenetic representation was not unlike a venn diagram! Graphs would become extremely convoluted, and wouldn't be able to represent the full scope of changes.

While 3-D models are necessarily bad, they are an over complication of the concept.

The third dimension is, typically, unnecessary.
5. Which living groups of animals are birds most closely related to?

Answer: Crocodiles (crocodylomorpha)

While it is uncertain whether birds evolved from dinosaurs, crocodiles, or are another radiation of archosaurs, the only LIVING relative is the crocodiles. Yes, birds are, relatively, close relatives of crocodiles. Reptiles are a paraphyletic group (meaning that the grouping is scientifically false, and encompasses a mosaic of different groups). Birds are actually contained WITHIN the groups that are associated with reptiles (dinosaurs, lizards, crocodiles). Just an example of a misleading common grouping, the lack of a scientific name should have given it away!

The Jesus lizard or basilisk (Basiliscus plumifrons) was given the name Jesus lizard for its ability to run across water. Pretty incredible to see.
6. Which of these is a general description of a polyphyletic group?

Answer: Encompasses descendants from unrelated ancestors.

If they had evolved from the SAME ancestor, than it would be a monophyletic group. This grouping does exist, it is still applicable, and it is used to describe a group of organisms that usually display convergent evolution. Translation: these groupings are often used to collect organisms that show similar traits and adaptations.
7. Which one of these groups is not like the others? Remember, we are talking about phylogenetics, so one of these groupings is different!

Answer: Hylobatini: eg. gibbons and siamangs

The hylobatini are the only group that descends from the same most recent common ancestor. All the others exhibit convergent evolution in some trait or another. Insectivores eat insects, but are clearly from different groups. The two moles listed as examples developed completely independently, yet they share many similar traits. Similar spade-like forelimbs, reduced eyes, and even a similar colour fur in some species! The term pachyderm was previously used to describe a wide variety of organisms, but is now obsolete. The term edentate is often used to describe organisms that lack teeth.

Both the armadillo and the pangolin have scale-like armor, but each evolved this armoring independently.
8. Parsimony is?

Answer: The development of an organism with the least number of evolutionary changes is usually the correct one.

This is the theory that the evolutionary tree with the fewest number of changes is most likely to be the correct one. This suggests that creatures are less likely to adapt a certain trait several times (eg. adapt eyes, then lose eyes, then re-adapt them over their development). This is extremely relevant to phylogenetics.
9. Which one of these groups do humans NOT belong to?

Answer: Strepsirrhini.

Strepsirrhines are considered the most 'primitive' (in quotes because it's a relative term, generally relative to humans, but these organisms are adapted and developed for what they do) of the primates. They are primarily nocturnal and include the Malagasy primates (those primates that live on Madagascar), such as lemurs. All organisms with a 'skull' belong to the clade Craniata. All those with a vertebral column, eg. a spine, are Vertebrata. Finally, amniotes lay special eggs with an amnion membrane, along with several other defining features.
10. Monotremes, such as the egg-laying billed platypus, belong to which of the following clades?

Answer: Mammalia.

Monotremes are mammals, and pretty cool ones at that. Fossil evidence suggests that the monotremes originated, not in Australia, but in South America, and dispersed into Australia when the two were connected as Gondwana (NOT Gondwanaland!). Pretty awesome. If you are interested, you can check out:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obdurodon

Which gives a decent summary of it all (I know, I know, it's no authority, but accessibility outweighs its unreliable nature).

I hope you enjoyed my first quiz. Please provide me with feedback so I can come back and fix this. The field is always changing, and I'm bound to have gotten SOMETHING wrong!

Have a good day/night/evening/morning/afternoon. . . ad nauseum.
Source: Author IronCretin

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor crisw before going online.
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