出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/02/18 14:04 UTC 版)
Learned borrowing from Ancient Greek κλάδος (kládos, “shoot, branch”). Coined by British evolutionary biologist, philosopher, author Julian Huxley in 1957 in a paper titled The Three Types of Evolutionary Process in Nature. Doublet of cladus.
clade (third-person singular simple present clades, present participle clading, simple past and past participle claded)
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2011/07/28 12:13 UTC 版)
A clade is a group consisting of a species (extinct or extant) and all its descendants. In the terms of biological systematics, a clade is a single "branch" on the "tree of life". The idea that such a "natural group" of organisms should be grouped together and given a taxonomic name is central to biological classification. In cladistics (which takes its name from the term), clades are the only acceptable units.
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