‘Everything is interrelated:’ Scientists write family tree for tree of life
Scientists have written the family tree for the tree of life.
Researchers from around the world and several Canadian universities say it’s taken nine years of work to analyze the genetics of 1,100 plant species from algae to elm trees. That work, released Wednesday in the journal Nature, has allowed them to pinpoint a billion years of evolutionary relationships between plants as different as cannabis and cucumbers, orchids and oaks.
“Everything is interrelated,” said the University of Alberta’s Gane Wong, one of the paper’s dozens of co-authors.
Science has known for a long time that species with significant differences can be related through a common evolutionary ancestor. In plants, those relationships have been studied mostly through how they look or behave. Do they have trunks? Flowers? How do their seeds form?