cladistics
Cladistics is a method of biological classification that groups organisms by their common ancestry, yielding clades that include a common ancestor and all its descendants. Clades are defined by shared derived characteristics, or synapomorphies, that diagnose a lineage. In a cladistic analysis, characters are coded for multiple taxa and polarity is established (ancestral versus derived) using an outgroup. Homology is the basis for recognizing traits shared by descent, while homoplasy—convergence or reversal—can complicate inferences and lead to misleading similarities if not properly accounted for.
The approach was formalized by Willi Hennig in the 1950s as an attempt to reflect evolutionary history
A central implication is the emphasis on monophyletic groups—units that include all descendants of a common