Evolutionary patterns in early tetrapods. II. Differing constraints on available character space among clades
- 16 May 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 273 (1598) , 2113-2118
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2006.3561
Abstract
Radiations of large clades often accompany rapid morphological diversification. Evolutionary biologists debate the impact of external restrictions imposed by ecology, and intrinsic constraints imposed by development and genetics, on the rate at which morphological innovations are gained. These issues are particularly interesting for groups such as tetrapods, which evolved novel body plans relative to their piscine ancestors and which also invaded new ecosystems following terrestrialization. Prior studies have addressed these issues by looking at either ranges of morphological variation or rates of character change. Here, we address a related but distinct issue: the numbers of characters that freely vary within a clade. We modify techniques similar to those used by ecologists to infer species richnesses to estimate the number of potentially varying characters given the distributions of changes implied by a model phylogeny. Our results suggest both increasing constraints/restrictions and episodes of ‘character release’ (i.e. increasing the number of potentially varying characters). In particular, we show that stem lissamphibians had a restricted character space relative to that of stem amniotes, and that stem amniotes both had restrictions on some parts of character space but also invaded new character space that had been unavailable to stem tetrapods.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evolutionary patterns in early tetrapods. I. Rapid initial diversification followed by decrease in rates of character changeProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2006
- Measuring changes in articulate brachiopod morphology before and after the Permian mass extinction event: do developmental constraints limit morphological innovation?Evolution & Development, 2004
- The Early Evolution of the Tetrapod HumerusScience, 2004
- Quantifying Biodiversity: a Phylogenetic PerspectiveConservation Biology, 2002
- EXHAUSTION OF MORPHOLOGIC CHARACTER STATES AMONG FOSSIL TAXAEvolution, 2000
- Ecological Controls on the Evolutionary Recovery of Post-Paleozoic CrinoidsScience, 1996
- Polydactyly in the earliest known tetrapod limbsNature, 1990
- Estimating the number of unseen species: How many words did Shakespeare know?Biometrika, 1976
- The Nonconcept of Species Diversity: A Critique and Alternative ParametersEcology, 1971
- Marine Benthic Diversity: A Comparative StudyThe American Naturalist, 1968