Phylogenetic nomenclature associates names with
clades, groups consisting of an ancestor and all its descendants. Such groups are said to be
monophyletic. There are slightly different methods of specifying the ancestor, which are discussed below. Once the ancestor is specified, the meaning of the name is fixed: the ancestor and all organisms which are its descendants are included in the taxon named. Listing all these organisms (i.e. providing a full
circumscription) requires the complete phylogenetic tree to be known. In practice, there are almost always one or more
hypotheses as to the correct relationship. Different hypotheses result in different organisms being thought to be included in the named taxon, but application to the name in the context of various phylogenies generally remains unambiguous. Possible exceptions occur for apomorphy-based definitions, when optimization of the defining apomorphy is ambiguous.
Phylogenetic definitions of clade names All that is needed to specify a clade, is to designate the ancestor. There are a number of methods of doing this. Commonly, the
ancestor is indicated by its relation to two or more
specifiers (species, specimens, or traits) that are mentioned explicitly. The diagram shows three common ways of doing this. For previously defined clades A, B, and C, the clade X can be defined as: of the relations of A, B and C. • A
node-based definition could read: "the
last common ancestor of A and B, and all descendants of that ancestor". Thus, the entire line below the junction of A and B does
not belong to the clade to which the name with this definition refers. A
crown group is a type of node-based group where A and B are extant (living) taxa. ::Example: The
sauropod dinosaurs consist of the last common ancestor of
Vulcanodon (A) and
Apatosaurus (B) and all of that ancestor's descendants. This ancestor was the first sauropod. C could include other dinosaurs like
Stegosaurus. • A
branch-based definition, often termed a
stem-based definition, could read: "the
first ancestor of A which is not also an ancestor of C, and all descendants of that ancestor". Thus, the entire line below the junction of A and B (other than the bottommost point)
does belong to the clade to which the name with this definition refers. A pan-group or
total group is a type of branch-based group where A and C are extant (living) taxa. ::Example (also a total group): The
rodents consist of the first ancestor of the
house mouse (A) that is not also an ancestor of the
eastern cottontail rabbit (C) together with all descendants of that ancestor. Here, the ancestor of A (but not C) is the very first rodent. B is some other descendant of that first rodent, perhaps the
red squirrel. • An
apomorphy-based definition could read: "the first ancestor of A to possess trait M that is inherited by A, and all descendants of that ancestor". In the diagram, M evolves at the intersection of the horizontal line with the tree. Thus, the clade to which the name with this definition refers contains that part of the line below the last common ancestor of A and B which corresponds to ancestors possessing the apomorphy M. The lower part of the line is excluded. It is not required that B have trait M; it may have disappeared in the lineage leading to B. ::Example: the
tetrapods consist of the first ancestor of humans (A) from which humans inherited limbs with fingers or toes (M) and all descendants of that ancestor. These descendants include
snakes (B), which do not have limbs. Several other alternatives are provided in the
PhyloCode, (see
below) though there is no attempt to be exhaustive. Phylogenetic nomenclature allows the use, not only of ancestral
relations, but also of the
property of being
extant. One of the many methods of specifying the
Neornithes (modern birds), for example, is: :::The Neornithes consist of the last common ancestor of the
extant members of the most inclusive clade containing the cockatoo
Cacatua galerita but not the dinosaur
Stegosaurus armatus, as well as all descendants of that ancestor. Neornithes is a
crown clade, a clade for which the last common ancestor of its extant members is also the last common ancestor of
all its members.
Node names •
Crown node: Most recent common ancestor of the sampled species of the clade of interest. •
Stem node: Most recent common ancestor of the clade of interest
and its sibling clade.
Ancestry-based definitions of the names of paraphyletic and polyphyletic taxa For the
PhyloCode, only a clade can receive a "phylogenetic definition", and this restriction is observed in the present article. However, it is also possible to create definitions for the names of other groups that are phylogenetic in the sense that they use only ancestral relations based on species or specimens. For example, assuming Mammalia and Aves (birds) are defined in this manner, Amniotes could be defined as "the most recent common ancestor of Mammalia and Aves and all its descendants except Mammalia and Aves". This is an example of a
paraphyletic group, a clade minus one or more subordinate clades. Names of
polyphyletic groups, characterized by a trait that evolved
convergently in two or more subgroups, can be defined similarly as the sum of multiple clades. ==Ranks==