The ICTV code uses the phrase “monophyletic group” several times, including in its definition of an MGE species. The code does not, however, define the word “monophyletic”. Defining such a commonly used word may feel unnecessary to many people, but is complicated by the fact that there are two main usages of the word.
The first usage of the word essentially considers a group that shares a common ancestor to be monophyletic.
In the second usage of the word, a group is monophyletic if it includes all the descendants of some ancestor, and only those descendants. In contrast to Usage 1, this second usage makes “monophyletic” mutually exclusive with “paraphyletic”.
Unfortunately, perhaps, preference for one usage over the other has historically been polarized by taxonomic philosophy. The “cladistic” or “phylogenetic systematic” school recommends Usage 2, whereas the “evolutionary taxonomic” school says that Usage 1 is more correct, and uses the word “holophyletic” as a synonymous alternative for Usage 2.
The most lucid description of the difference between the two usages that I have found is a chapter by Sober in ‘Keywords in evolutionary biology’, edited by Keller and Lloyd (1992).
I am considering writing a Taxonomy Proposal to reduce this ambiguity by adding a working definition for ICTV purposes and thereby recommending one usage over the other. I think that the Executive Committee has made clear that polyphyletic taxa are undesireable, but I have noticed that polyphyly and paraphyly are sometimes confused or conflated. I do not necessarily think that the Executive Committee should make further statements about the desirability of paraphyletic taxa at this time, but I am not sure what their current stance is, because of the terminological ambiguity. (I interpret last year's consensus statement paper as favoring Usage 2 of the word to some extent.) I would be interested in feedback that anyone might have, especially if they think I am confused or confusing!
p.s. congratulations to all ICTV contributors on the release of MSL39.
Monophyly language in 2023 consensus paper
Perhaps I should have quoted from the recent ‘four principles’ consensus statement/workshop report alluded to above (Simmonds, Adriaenssens, Zerbini et al. 2023 https://doi.org/grr54k). The authors state that for ideal monophyletic taxa, “all members of a rank share a most recent common ancestor that is distinct from all other evolutionary lineages assigned to the taxonomy despite the impact of gene acquisition, recombination, or reassortment events on genome organizations.”
This quote seems closer to Usage 2, but I think it can also be read as consistent with Usage 1.
(I find this quoted description hard to reason about: the parts before and after the word ‘despite’ seem fairly incompatible, though the rest of the paper provides some explanation.)
Monophyletic taxa
The paper “Virus taxonomy and the role of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV)” (Siddell et al. 2023; PMID: 37141106) has a glossary that defines monophyletic as follows:
Monophyletic. A monophyletic taxon is defined as one that includes a single most recent common ancestor of a group of viruses and all of its descendants.
As the paper was authored by the ICTV Executive Committee (2023), I think it is fair to consider this as the “approved” definition.
Thank you — that is helpful…
Thank you — that is helpful. I missed or forgot about that glossary. Citing and/or quoting that paper seems like an excellent way to capture the 2023 consensus view of the Executive Committee.
I did write up a brief Taxonomy Proposal to add a very similar definition of the word to the ICVCN (following Usage 2), but I didn't formally submit it for the 2024 cycle.
Thanks again.