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Overview: This article describes practical applications of phylogenetics, focusing on intriguing cases ripe for deployment in classrooms like using phylogenetics to investigate crimes. This article appears at SpringerLink.Author/Source: Evolution: Education and Outreach Grade level: 13-16 Time: 30 minutes Teaching tips: This article is written for teachers and comes with links to additional examples, supplementary information, and classroom tips. It is also available as a pdf at http://www.springerlink.com/content/n7309n36k4j60487/fulltext.pdf Concepts: Correspondence to the Next Generation Science Standards is indicated in parentheses after each relevant concept. See our conceptual framework for details. - Present-day species evolved from earlier species; the relatedness of organisms is the result of common ancestry.
- As with other scientific disciplines, evolutionary biology has applications that factor into everyday life, for example in agriculture, biodiversity and conservation biology, and medicine and health.
- Evolutionary trees (i.e., phylogenies or cladograms) portray hypotheses about evolutionary relationships.
- Evolutionary trees can be used to make inferences and predictions.
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