I'm going further and saying that it necessarily must be that way. Characters are coded when they go into the equations, and once they're coded it doesn't matter what they were prior to coding, the math treats them all the same.Kotatsu said:What I have said is that the programs commonly (and traditionally) used for phylogeny reconstruction work equally well with morphological and genetic data...
Depends. The hominid fossil record is much better than most people realize; that said, we ARE talking terrestrial organisms who sometimes bury their dead and who lived in rift valleys. Not ideal locations for preservation. Still, we do have a fair number of specimens from some species, certainly far more than just the type specimens (to be fair, when I say "type" I mean holotype, not paratypes or the rest; you add those in and things get rather confusing). I've always admitted that the assumption that the hominid species weren't as diverse as modern humans was just that--an assumption. That said, when you hear hoofbeats, think horse, not zebra; unless there is some reason to assume that a species has an unusually high diversity in terms of morphology, we assume that it has similar diversity to other species in the taxa. Most apes do not have diversity anywhere NEAR that of humans, and a good chunk of human diversity is tied to the fact that we spread out. Anything that didn't spread out as far as H. sapiens sapiens, and which presents no evidence for being unusually diverse, will be treated as if it had normal morphological range in paleontology. That's the default. Sure, we're wrong on occasion--and hominids are no where near the most spectacular error we've made. However, we're right far more often than we're wrong, and we are always, always, always open to re-examining our conclusions in light of new data.Kotatsu said:Surely, for fossilised hominid skulls, all we would have is precisely type specimens (or other specimens)?
As I have said repeatedly, and you have yet to even attempt to refute, the selection of the genes one wishes to examine is subjective. Even if you use the whole genome and enzymes to slice it into chunks (I forget what they're called) to run the bar-code tests, you've still got the choice of which enzyme to choose. I have seen that make significant differences. Unless you analyze the entire genome, base-pair by base-pair, you're dealing with subjectivity in the form of choice. We can mitigate that by re-running the tree based on what we learn from previous attempts, ie, learning from past attempts and removing obviously spurious data, but that still includes a great deal of subjectivity and--and this is the critical issue, which you insist on ignoring--this is true for ANY phylogenetic construction, based on ANY set of traits.Jodie said:The alignment programs have an error rate of 1-2.5% depending on what you are looking at, how is that subjective?
The ONLY difference between DNA and morphology in terms of phylogeny is that DNA has fewer characters to code if you go down to the base-pair level. After that, they're on a level playing feild as far as subjectivity/objectivity go. This has been demonstrated by the fact that they yield the same results.
I ask again: if morphology and genetics provide the same results (which they demonstrably do in at least some cases, particularly in the fossil record), why should we add genetic data? If the data will not give us any new information, why should we treat it as anything other than superfluous?