Phylogenies and Community Ecology
Dartmouth College · Yale University · +1 more institution
Abstract
▪ Abstract As better phylogenetic hypotheses become available for many groups of organisms, studies in community ecology can be informed by knowledge of the evolutionary relationships among coexisting species. We note three primary approaches to integrating phylogenetic information into studies of community organization: 1. examining the phylogenetic structure of community assemblages, 2. exploring the phylogenetic basis of community niche structure, and 3. adding a community context to studies of trait evolution and biogeography. We recognize a common pattern of phylogenetic conservatism in ecological character and highlight the challenges of using phylogenies of partial lineages. We also review phylogenetic…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.78
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 271
Authors
4- COCampbell O. WebbCorresponding
Dartmouth College, Yale University, Stanford University
- DDDavid D. Ackerly
Dartmouth College, Yale University, Stanford University
- MAMark A. McPeek
Dartmouth College, Yale University, Stanford University
- MJMichael J. Donoghue
Dartmouth College, Yale University, Stanford University
Topics & keywords
- Phylogenetic tree
- Biology
- Phylogenetic diversity
- Ecology
- Community
- Supertree
- Context (archaeology)
- Phylogenetics
- Life in Land