Publication | Open Access
Homology and errors
46
Citations
70
References
2012
Year
GeneticsTaxonomyHomology ConceptComparative AnatomyComparative BiologyComputational TopologyPhylogenetic AnalysisPhylogeneticsEvolutionary TaxonomyRecent ReviewSecondary HomologyPhylogeny ComparisonMorphologyTopological Data AnalysisBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPhylogenetic MethodCladisticsTaxonomy (Biology)MedicinePlant Phylogeny
A recent review of the homology concept in cladistics is critiqued in light of the historical literature. Homology as a notion relevant to the recognition of clades remains equivalent to synapomorphy. Some symplesiomorphies are "homologies" inasmuch as they represent synapomorphies of more inclusive taxa; others are complementary character states that do not imply any shared evolutionary history among the taxa that exhibit the state. Undirected character-state change (as characters optimized on an unrooted tree) is a necessary but not sufficient test of homology, because the addition of a root may alter parsimonious reconstructions. Primary and secondary homology are defended as realistic representations of discovery procedures in comparative biology, recognizable even in Direct Optimization. The epistemological relationship between homology as evidence and common ancestry as explanation is again emphasized. An alternative definition of homology is proposed. © The Willi Hennig Society 2012.
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