ADAPTIVE RADIATION AND THE TOPOLOGY OF LARGE PHYLOGENIES
- 1 February 1993
- Vol. 47 (1) , 253-263
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.1993.tb01214.x
Abstract
The idea that some organisms possess adaptive features that make them more likely to speciate and/or less likely to go extinct than closely related groups, suggests that large phylogenetic trees should be unbalanced (more species should occur in the group possessing the adaptive features than in the sister group lacking such features). Several methods have been used to document this type of adaptive radiation. One problem with these attempts is that evolutionary biologists may overlook balanced phylogenies while focusing on a few impressively unbalanced ones. To overcome this potential bias, we sampled published large phylogenies without regard to tree shape. These were used to test whether or not such trees are consistently unbalanced. We used recently developed null models to demonstrate that the shapes of large phylogenetic trees: 1) are similar among angiosperms, insects, and tetrapods; 2) differ from those expected due to random selection of a phylogeny from the pool of all trees of similar size; and 3) are significantly more unbalanced than expected if species diverge at random, therefore, conforming to one prediction of adaptive radiation. This represents an important first step in documenting whether adaptive radiation has been a general feature of evolution.Keywords
Funding Information
- Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station (15-902571P)
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Escalation of Plant Defense: Do Latex and Resin Canals Spur Plant Diversification?The American Naturalist, 1991
- Nonrandom Diversification within Taxonomic AssemblagesSystematic Zoology, 1989
- AMNIOTE PHYLOGENY AND THE IMPORTANCE OF FOSSILSCladistics, 1988
- Why so Many Passerine Birds? A Response to RaikowSystematic Zoology, 1988
- Phylogenies and the Comparative MethodThe American Naturalist, 1985
- The Role of Insect Pollination in the Evolution of the AngiospermsPublished by Elsevier ,1983
- Pattern and process in paleobiology: the role of cladistic analysis in systematic paleontologyPaleobiology, 1981
- Clams and brachiopods—ships that pass in the nightPaleobiology, 1980
- The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programmeProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1979
- Phanerozoic Diversity Patterns: Tests for RandomnessThe Journal of Geology, 1975