paraphyletic
English
editEtymology
editFrom para- (“near”) + Ancient Greek φῦλον (phûlon, “tribe, race”) + -etic.
Adjective
editparaphyletic (not comparable)
- (systematics) Of a defined group of taxa: not including all descendants of the most recent common ancestor of all members.
Usage notes
edit- Paraphyletic groups are not clades and are therefore likely to be superseded by systematic taxonomy, though they may be used for convenience for some time, especially if they correspond to an intuitively appealing group. An example is the lay concept of fish, one definition of which includes mammals, such as whales, as well as sharks, sturgeon, and scaled fish, the common ancestor of which is some ancestral vertebrate, from which amphibians and reptiles are also descended.
Related terms
editTranslations
editExcluding some descendants of the most recent common ancestor
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