articleJournal of Evolutionary BiologyNov 1, 2002BRONZE OA

Tempo and mode in evolution: phylogenetic inertia, adaptation and comparative methods

University of California, Riverside

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Abstract

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…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Phylogenetic tree
  • Biology
  • Phylogenetic comparative methods
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Adaptation (eye)
  • Inertia
  • Phylogenetics
  • Natural selection
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