Phylogenetic Analysis and Comparative Data: A Test and Review of Evidence
Oxford Research Group · University of Oxford
Abstract
The question is often raised whether it is statistically necessary to control for phylogenetic associations in comparative studies. To investigate this question, we explore the use of a measure of phylogenetic correlation, lambda, introduced by Pagel (1999), that normally varies between 0 (phylogenetic independence) and 1 (species' traits covary in direct proportion to their shared evolutionary history). Simulations show lambda to be a statistically powerful index for measuring whether data exhibit phylogenetic dependence or not and whether it has low rates of Type I error. Moreover, lambda is robust to incomplete phylogenetic information, which demonstrates that even partial information on phylogeny will…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 46.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 66
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Phylogenetic tree
- Phylogenetic comparative methods
- Biology
- Phylogenetics
- Evolutionary biology
- Phylogenetic network
- Correlation
- Statistics