Q.96 Which of the following most accurately states the goal of systematics?
(A) Classification scheme should reflect phylogenetic relationship
(B) All animals should be classified based on the relatedness at the early embryonic stage
(C) All animals should be grouped based on DNA sequence data
(D) Classification of animals should be based on morphological characters
Correct Answer: (A) Classification scheme should reflect phylogenetic relationship
Modern systematics aims to construct classifications (cladograms/phylogenies) that accurately depict evolutionary relationships among organisms, making monophyletic groups (common ancestor + all descendants) the basis for taxonomy.
Option Analysis
Option (A)
Correct. The core goal of systematics is creating hierarchical classifications mirroring actual evolutionary/phylogenetic histories, using all evidence (morphology, DNA, fossils) to resolve branching patterns.
Option (B)
Incorrect. Embryonic stages provide evidence but aren’t the sole/primary basis; adult morphology, molecular data, fossils contribute equally to phylogeny reconstruction.
Option (C)
Incorrect. DNA sequences are valuable data but not the exclusive method; morphological, developmental, fossil evidence also essential. “DNA-only” ignores prokaryotes, fossils.
Option (D)
Incorrect. Traditional morphology-based classification (Linnaean) often created paraphyletic groups; modern systematics prioritizes phylogeny over superficial similarities.
Introduction to Goal of Systematics
The goal of systematics is constructing classifications reflecting true evolutionary relationships (phylogenies), not just superficial similarities. GATE Q.96 tests this modern principle: Option (A) correctly identifies phylogenetic accuracy as systematics’ objective, distinguishing it from outdated morphology-only approaches.
Modern Systematics: Phylogenetic Classification
Goal of systematics = Create monophyletic taxa (clades) via:
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Cladistic analysis: Shared derived characters (synapomorphies) define branches
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Phylogenetic trees: Show ancestor-descendant relationships
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Multiple data integration: Morphology + molecules + fossils + development
Example: Birds + crocodiles form Archosauria clade (despite feathers vs. scales), reflecting dinosaur common ancestry.
Why Other Options Fall Short
| Option | Limitation | Historical Context |
|---|---|---|
| B Embryonic stages | Useful evidence, not sole criterion | Haeckel (1860s); von Baer laws |
| C DNA sequences only | Ignores fossils, prokaryotes; convergence issues | Molecular systematics (post-1980s) |
| D Morphology | Creates paraphyletic groups (e.g., “fish”) | Linnaean system (1758) |
Historical Evolution of Systematics Goals
Pheneticism (1950s) → Overall similarity
Cladistics (1960s+) → Shared derived characters
Phylogenetic systematics → Evolutionary trees
Goal of systematics shifted from artificial groupings to natural (phylogenetic) ones after Hennig’s cladistic revolution.
GATE Exam Strategy
Goal of systematics questions test XL-Ecology/Evolution. Key distinction:
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Systematics = Reconstruct phylogeny
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Taxonomy = Name/assign to categories
Memorize: “Classification should reflect phylogeny” = universal answer for modern biology exams.