Tempo and mode in evolution: phylogenetic inertia, adaptation and comparative methods
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 November 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Evolutionary Biology
- Vol. 15 (6) , 899-910
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1420-9101.2002.00472.x
Abstract
Before the Evolutionary Synthesis, ‘phylogenetic inertia’ was associated with theories of orthogenesis, which claimed that organisms possessed an endogenous perfecting principle. The concept in the modern literature dates to Simpson (1944), who used ‘evolutionary inertia’ as a description of pattern in the fossil record. Wilson (1975) used ‘phylogenetic inertia’ to describe population-level or organismal properties that can affect the course of evolution in response to selection. Many current authors now view phylogenetic inertia as an alternative hypothesis to adaptation by natural selection when attempting to explain interspecific variation, covariation or lack thereof in phenotypic traits. Some phylogenetic comparative methods have been claimed to allow quantification and testing of phylogenetic inertia. Although some existing methods do allow valid tests of whether related species tend to resemble each other, which we term ‘phylogenetic signal’, this is simply pattern recognition and does not imply any underlying process. Moreover, comparative data sets generally do not include information that would allow rigorous inferences concerning causal processes underlying such patterns. The concept of phylogenetic inertia needs to be defined and studied with as much care as ‘adaptation’.Keywords
This publication has 64 references indexed in Scilit:
- Optimality and Phylogeny: A Critique of Current ThoughtPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2001
- Adaptation, Phylogenetic Inertia, and the Method of Controlled ComparisonsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2001
- An Introduction to Phylogenetically Based Statistical Methods, with a New Method for Confidence Intervals on Ancestral ValuesAmerican Zoologist, 1999
- Phylogenies and the Comparative Method: A General Approach to Incorporating Phylogenetic Information into the Analysis of Interspecific DataThe American Naturalist, 1997
- Adaptive Radiation Along Genetic Lines of Least ResistanceEvolution, 1996
- Evolutionary PhysiologyAnnual Review of Physiology, 1994
- Sib competition and sperm competitiveness: an answer to ‘Why so many sperms?’ and the recombination/sperm number correlationProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1994
- Measuring Evolutionary Constraints: A Markov Model for Phylogenetic Transitions among Seed Dispersal SyndromesEvolution, 1992
- Heritability of locomotor performance and its correlates in a natural populationCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1990
- Phylogenies and the Comparative MethodThe American Naturalist, 1985