Parasitology, Harold W. Manter Laboratory of

 

Date of this Version

8-1989

Comments

Published in the Journal of Parsitology (August 1989) 75(4): 606-616. Copyright 1989, the American Society of Parasitologists. Used by permission.

Abstract

The unified theory of evolution is an expansion of Darwinian theory that asserts that evolution is driven by entropic accumulation of genetic information that is constrained and organized primarily by the genealogical effects of phylogenetic history and developmental integration, and secondarily by ecological effects, or natural selection in its classical mode. Phylogenetic systematic analysis of the 8 major groups of parasitic rhabdocoelous platyhelminths permits empirical macroevolutionary evaluation of these postulates. Of the 131 characters considered, 127 are phylogenetically constrained, and 4 show evidence of 1 case of convergence each. Data from different developmental stages are phylogenetically congruent, despite differences in ecology among those stages. Ecological diversification, indicated by phylogenetic association of definitive hosts and parasites, and by changes in ecological components of life cycle patterns, is more conservative evolutionarily than diversification in developmental patterns, indicated by the appearance of unique larval stages, asexual proliferation of larvae, polyembryony, and heterochronic changes. These observations support the macroevolutionary postulates of the unified theory. "The distinction between fundamental plesiomorphic and derived apomorphic characters is basic for any consideration of the phylogeny and systematics of any group--and especially so for a parasitic group" (Horace W. Stunkard, 1983, in litt., archives of the H. W. Manter Laboratory, Division of Parasitology, University of Nebraska State Museum)

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