Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun The study of phylogeny.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun systematics The systematic study of organism relationships based on evolutionary similarities and differences.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

phylo- +‎ genetics

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Examples

  • Camp works in phylogenetics, which is the study of "the

    CreationWiki - Recent changes [en] 2009

  • She is "an evolutionary biologist who integrates molecular phylogenetics with advanced computational biostatistics to reconstruct the influences on population dynamics in a wide variety of organisms."

    2009 MacArthur Fellows: Lin He and Beth Shapiro Peggy 2009

  • In the more advances courses, I think it is also important to emphasize molecular phylogenetics and developmental genetics as well.

    It's more than genes, it's networks and systems - The Panda's Thumb 2010

  • Martin Brazeau has an excellent post on taphonomy at The Lancelet reporting a paper in which folks let poor innocent critters rot in order to ascertain which anatomical features are likely to be preserved and which are likely to be lost before fossilization, and the implications for interpreting fossils of ‘soft’ tissues for phylogenetics.

    The Panda's Thumb: Transitional Fossils Archives 2010

  • Hunter apparently has no idea that, in phylogenetics, it is trivial to test hypotheses like “there is no tree structure in the sequence data” or “these two phylogenies from two different genes agree/disagree with each other”, to quantify the amount of agreement/disagreement, etc.

    If and only if Cornelius Hunter made sense, then... - The Panda's Thumb 2010

  • Martin Brazeau has an excellent post on taphonomy at The Lancelet reporting a paper in which folks let poor innocent critters rot in order to ascertain which anatomical features are likely to be preserved and which are likely to be lost before fossilization, and the implications for interpreting fossils of ‘soft’ tissues for phylogenetics.

    Rotting fish and taphonomy: what fossilizes? - The Panda's Thumb 2010

  • Martin Brazeau has an excellent post on taphonomy at The Lancelet reporting a paper in which folks let poor innocent critters rot in order to ascertain which anatomical features are likely to be preserved and which are likely to be lost before fossilization, and the implications for interpreting fossils of ‘soft’ tissues for phylogenetics.

    The Panda's Thumb: February 2010 Archives 2010

  • Martin Brazeau has an excellent post on taphonomy at The Lancelet reporting a paper in which folks let poor innocent critters rot in order to ascertain which anatomical features are likely to be preserved and which are likely to be lost before fossilization, and the implications for interpreting fossils of ‘soft’ tissues for phylogenetics.

    The Panda's Thumb: Research News Archives 2010

  • Ecophylogenetics is a field of study that uses information about the evolutionary relationships among species (phylogenetics) to test hypotheses about how ecological communities are assembled and about the potential outcomes of species interactions.

    Ecophylogenetics 2009

  • This new genus is Pilbarascutigera and is described in the paper “A new genus of scutigerid centipeds (Chilopoda) from Western Australia, with new characters for morphological phylogenetics of Scutigeromorpha” by G.D. Edgecombe and L. Barrow within Zootaxa 1409: 23-50 (2007)

    Archive 2007-02-01 2007

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