EARLY BURSTS OF BODY SIZE AND SHAPE EVOLUTION ARE RARE IN COMPARATIVE DATA
University of British Columbia · University of Idaho · +21 more institutions
Abstract
George Gaylord Simpson famously postulated that much of life's diversity originated as adaptive radiations-more or less simultaneous divergences of numerous lines from a single ancestral adaptive type. However, identifying adaptive radiations has proven difficult due to a lack of broad-scale comparative datasets. Here, we use phylogenetic comparative data on body size and shape in a diversity of animal clades to test a key model of adaptive radiation, in which initially rapid morphological evolution is followed by relative stasis. We compared the fit of this model to both single selective peak and random walk models. We found little support for the early-burst model of adaptive radiation, whereas both other…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 51.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 94
Authors
19- LJLuke J. HarmonCorresponding
University of British Columbia, University of Idaho
- JBJonathan B. Losos
Harvard University
- TJT. Jonathan Davies
University of California, Santa Barbara, State Street (United States), National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
- RGRosemary G. Gillespie
University of California, Berkeley
- JLJohn L. Gittleman
University of Georgia
Topics & keywords
- Adaptive radiation
- Biology
- Clade
- Divergence (linguistics)
- Evolutionary biology
- Rate of evolution
- Phylogenetic comparative methods
- Phylogenetic tree
- Life in Land