Effects of sample size and intraspecific variation in phylogenetic comparative studies: a meta‐analytic review
- 8 February 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Biological Reviews
- Vol. 85 (4) , 797-805
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-185x.2010.00126.x
Abstract
Comparative analyses aim to explain interspecific variation in phenotype among taxa. In this context, phylogenetic approaches are generally applied to control for similarity due to common descent, because such phylogenetic relationships can produce spurious similarity in phenotypes (known as phylogenetic inertia or bias). On the other hand, these analyses largely ignore potential biases due to within-species variation. Phylogenetic comparative studies inherently assume that species-specific means from intraspecific samples of modest sample size are biologically meaningful. However, within-species variation is often significant, because measurement errors, within- and between-individual variation, seasonal fluctuations, and differences among populations can all reduce the repeatability of a trait. Although simulations revealed that low repeatability can increase the type I error in a phylogenetic study, researchers only exercise great care in accounting for similarity in phenotype due to common phylogenetic descent, while problems posed by intraspecific variation are usually neglected. A meta-analysis of 194 comparative analyses all adjusting for similarity due to common phylogenetic descent revealed that only a few studies reported intraspecific repeatabilities, and hardly any considered or partially dealt with errors arising from intraspecific variation. This is intriguing, because the meta-analytic data suggest that the effect of heterogeneous sampling can be as important as phylogenetic bias, and thus they should be equally controlled in comparative studies. We provide recommendations about how to handle such effects of heterogeneous sampling.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Host ecology and life‐history traits associated with blood parasite species richness in birdsJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 2008
- Comparative Methods with Sampling Error and Within‐Species Variation: Contrasts Revisited and RevisedThe American Naturalist, 2008
- Prevalence of avian influenza and host ecologyProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2007
- Testes size in birds: quality versus quantity—assumptions, errors, and estimatesBehavioral Ecology, 2006
- THE EFFECT OF INTRASPECIFIC SAMPLE SIZE ON TYPE I AND TYPE II ERROR RATES IN COMPARATIVE STUDIESEvolution, 2005
- Phylogenetic approaches in comparative physiologyJournal of Experimental Biology, 2005
- Phylogenetic Analysis and Comparative Data: A Test and Review of EvidenceThe American Naturalist, 2002
- Physiological Differentiation of Vertebrate PopulationsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1991
- Adaptation: Statistics and a Null Model for Estimating Phylogenetic EffectsSystematic Zoology, 1990
- Phylogenies and the Comparative MethodThe American Naturalist, 1985