In our interactive tree of life you can explore the relationships between 2,228,001 species and wonder at 105,508 images on a single zoomable page. Each leaf represents a different species, and the branches illustrate how these many species evolved from common ancestors over billions of years.
In evolutionary biology, all life on Earth is theoretically part of a single phylogenetic tree, indicating common ancestry. Phylogenetics is the study of phylogenetic trees. The main challenge is to find a phylogenetic tree representing optimal evolutionary ancestry between a set of species or taxa.
Evolutionarytrees may be visually depicted in many different ways. For help dissecting a particular tree type or to see the full diversity of tree types, visit our Field Guide to EvolutionaryTrees.
Evolutionarytrees are models that seek to reconstruct the evolutionary history of taxa—i.e., species or other groups of organisms, such as genera, families, or orders.
From the simplest microbes to the complex architecture of the human brain, all living things are twigs of a single, enormous tree rooted deep in Earth’s primeval history. Understanding the Tree of Life is not just about classifying organisms—it is about understanding ourselves.
Evolutionary trees, also known as phylogenetic trees, are visual representations that depict the evolutionary relationships among different biological entities. These entities can range from individual genes to entire species or groups of organisms.
Each leaf on the OneZoom tree represents a species and the branches show how they are connected through evolution. Discover your favourites, see which species are under threat, and wonder at 105,307 images on a single page.
The tree of life or universal tree of life is a metaphor, conceptual model, and research tool used to explore the evolution of life and describe the relationships between organisms, both living and extinct, as described in a famous passage in Charles Darwin 's On the Origin of Species (1859).
By studying inherited species’ characteristics and other historical evidence, we can reconstruct evolutionary relationships and represent them on a “family tree,” called a phylogeny. The phylogeny you see below represents the basic relationships that tie all life on Earth together.