different between clade vs salientian

clade

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ?????? (kládos, shoot, branch). Coined by British biologist Julian Huxley in 1957 in a paper titled "The three types of evolutionary process" in Nature. Doublet of cladus.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /kle?d/
  • Rhymes: -e?d

Noun

clade (plural clades)

  1. (systematics) A group of animals or other organisms derived from a common ancestor species.
    • 2001, Ross H. Nehm, 6: Linking Evolutionary Pattern and Development Process in Marginellid Gastropods, Alan H. Cheetham, Jeremy B. C. Jackson, Scott Lidgard, Frank K. McKinney (editors), Evolutionary Patterns: Growth, Form, and Tempo in the Fossil Record, page 166,
      All three clades containing Prunum and “Volvarina” species contain morphological features that do not collectively appear in any other living or fossil marginellid species (see above).
    • 2002, Stephen Jay Gould, The Structure of Evolutionary Theory, page 1092,
      No one has ever tabulated the number or percentage of non-trending clades within larger monophyletic groups. The concept of a non-trending clade — the higher level analog of a species in stasis — has never been explicitly formulated at all. If only one percent of clades exhibited sustained trends, we would still focus our attention upon this tiny minority in telling our favored version of the story of life's history.
    • 2004 September 11, Bob Holmes, Linnean naming system faces challengers, New Scientist, page 13,
      A clade is made up of an ancestral species and all its descendants; think of it as that part of an evolutionary tree that would fall off with a single saw cut.
  2. (genetics) A higher level grouping of a genetic haplogroup.

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

clade (third-person singular simple present clades, present participle clading, simple past and past participle claded)

  1. To be part of a clade; to form a clade.
    • 2009, Andrew J. Brown and C. Robin Hiley, "Is GPR55 an Anandamide Receptor?" in Anandamide An Endogenous Cannabinoid (Vitamins And Hormones, Vol. 81), p. 117:
      The phylogenetic tree for CiCBR shows it clades with the human cannabinoid receptors rather than with those other human GPCRs which most closely resemble the cannabinoid receptors.

See also

  • monophyletic
  • phylogenetic
  • taxon
    • class, family, genus, kingdom, order, phylum, species
  • taxonomy

Further reading

  • cladistics on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Cadle, E.D. Cal., cadel, decal, laced

Catalan

Etymology

From English clade.

Pronunciation

  • (Balearic, Central) IPA(key): /?kla.d?/
  • (Valencian) IPA(key): /?kla.de/

Noun

clade m (plural clades)

  1. clade

Related terms

  • cladística

French

Noun

clade m (plural clades)

  1. clade
  2. branch

Italian

Etymology

From English clade.

Noun

clade m (plural cladi)

  1. (taxonomy) clade

Anagrams

  • calde

Latin

Noun

cl?de

  1. ablative singular of cl?d?s

clade From the web:

  • what clade are humans in
  • what clade are birds in
  • what clade includes all animals
  • what clade do humans belong to
  • what clade do birds belong to
  • what clade are sponges in
  • what clade does nematodes belong to
  • what clade are earthworms in


salientian

English

Etymology

Salientia +? -an.

Noun

salientian (plural salientians)

  1. (biology) Any amphibian of the clade Salientia; the frogs and toads (normally within order Anura or clade Batrachia)

Adjective

salientian (comparative more salientian, superlative most salientian)

  1. Of or pertaining to these animals.

Hyponyms

  • anuran
  • batrachian

See also

  • froggish
  • froggy
  • froglike
  • frogly
  • ranine
  • toadish
  • toadlike
  • toadly

Further reading

  • Anura (frog) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Batrachia on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Salientia on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • alinastine

salientian From the web:

  • what does salientian mean
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