Seraph wrote:Svartalf wrote:I never got the "birds are dinosaurs" thing as, last I checked, dinosaurs were still reptiles, which birds are not...
do we even have warm blooded reptiles around?
Yes. They are more commonly known as birds, though, which neatly brings us around to the conclusion that we can justifiably differentiate dinosaurs from birds.
Only taxonomically!
Cladistically speaking, new clades are nested within ancestral clades, and are therefore a part of those ancestral clades. I.e, birds and mammals and reptiles all belong to the same clade if you go back in time, i.e, we are all whatever term is applied to that clade. Go further back, include amphibians, and we begin to belong to the same clade as bony fish. Further back, same clade as all Eukaryotes, further back, same clade as all life.
We are, consequently, replicators, eukaryotes, multicellular, vertebrates, tetrapods and so on...
PS - A clade is defined as a species + all its descendents. Due to this, if X descended from Y and Y descended from Z, X is still a descendent of Z and therefore belongs to the same clade.