Potential for bias and low precision in molecular divergence time estimation of the Canopy of Life: an example from aquatic bird families

Uncertainty in divergence time estimation is rarely studied from the perspective of phylogenetic node age. If available models fail to completely account for rate heterogeneity, substitution saturation and incompleteness of the fossil record, uncertainty in divergence time estimation may increase wi...

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Main Authors: Marcel eVan Tuinen, Christopher Robert Torres
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Genetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2015.00203/full
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spelling doaj-2a8c6e1ab6154b2c9c4f1681bd35ba9a2020-11-25T00:22:33ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Genetics1664-80212015-06-01610.3389/fgene.2015.00203139422Potential for bias and low precision in molecular divergence time estimation of the Canopy of Life: an example from aquatic bird familiesMarcel eVan Tuinen0Marcel eVan Tuinen1Christopher Robert Torres2Christopher Robert Torres3Christopher Robert Torres4University of North Carolina at WilmingtonCenter for Ecological and Evolutionary StudiesUniversity of North Carolina at WilmingtonUniversity of Texas at AustinNational Evolutionary Synthesis CenterUncertainty in divergence time estimation is rarely studied from the perspective of phylogenetic node age. If available models fail to completely account for rate heterogeneity, substitution saturation and incompleteness of the fossil record, uncertainty in divergence time estimation may increase with node age. While many studies have stressed this concern with regard to deep nodes in the Tree of Life, the inference that molecular divergence time estimation of shallow nodes is less sensitive to erroneous model choice has not been tested explicitly in a Bayesian framework. Because of available divergence time estimation methods that permit fossil priors across any phylogenetic node and the present increase in efficient, cheap collection of species-level genomic data, insight is needed into the performance of divergence time estimation of shallow (<10MY) nodes. Here, we performed multiple sensitivity analyses in a multi-locus data set of aquatic birds with six fossil constraints. Comparison across divergence time analyses that varied taxon and locus sampling, number and position of fossil constraint and shape of prior distribution showed various insights. Deviation from node ages obtained from a reference analysis was generally highest for the shallowest nodes but determined more by temporal placement than number of fossil constraints. Calibration with only the shallowest nodes significantly underestimated the aquatic bird fossil record, indicating the presence of saturation. Although joint calibration with all six priors yielded ages most consistent with the fossil record, ages of shallow nodes were overestimated. This bias was found in both mtDNA and nDNA regions. Thus, divergence time estimation of shallow nodes may suffer from bias and low precision, even when appropriate fossil priors and best available substitution models are chosen. Much care must be taken to address the possible ramifications of substitution saturation across the entire Tree of Life.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2015.00203/fullBirdsCalibrationBayesianfossil recordmolecular clockdivergence time
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcel eVan Tuinen
Marcel eVan Tuinen
Christopher Robert Torres
Christopher Robert Torres
Christopher Robert Torres
spellingShingle Marcel eVan Tuinen
Marcel eVan Tuinen
Christopher Robert Torres
Christopher Robert Torres
Christopher Robert Torres
Potential for bias and low precision in molecular divergence time estimation of the Canopy of Life: an example from aquatic bird families
Frontiers in Genetics
Birds
Calibration
Bayesian
fossil record
molecular clock
divergence time
author_facet Marcel eVan Tuinen
Marcel eVan Tuinen
Christopher Robert Torres
Christopher Robert Torres
Christopher Robert Torres
author_sort Marcel eVan Tuinen
title Potential for bias and low precision in molecular divergence time estimation of the Canopy of Life: an example from aquatic bird families
title_short Potential for bias and low precision in molecular divergence time estimation of the Canopy of Life: an example from aquatic bird families
title_full Potential for bias and low precision in molecular divergence time estimation of the Canopy of Life: an example from aquatic bird families
title_fullStr Potential for bias and low precision in molecular divergence time estimation of the Canopy of Life: an example from aquatic bird families
title_full_unstemmed Potential for bias and low precision in molecular divergence time estimation of the Canopy of Life: an example from aquatic bird families
title_sort potential for bias and low precision in molecular divergence time estimation of the canopy of life: an example from aquatic bird families
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Genetics
issn 1664-8021
publishDate 2015-06-01
description Uncertainty in divergence time estimation is rarely studied from the perspective of phylogenetic node age. If available models fail to completely account for rate heterogeneity, substitution saturation and incompleteness of the fossil record, uncertainty in divergence time estimation may increase with node age. While many studies have stressed this concern with regard to deep nodes in the Tree of Life, the inference that molecular divergence time estimation of shallow nodes is less sensitive to erroneous model choice has not been tested explicitly in a Bayesian framework. Because of available divergence time estimation methods that permit fossil priors across any phylogenetic node and the present increase in efficient, cheap collection of species-level genomic data, insight is needed into the performance of divergence time estimation of shallow (<10MY) nodes. Here, we performed multiple sensitivity analyses in a multi-locus data set of aquatic birds with six fossil constraints. Comparison across divergence time analyses that varied taxon and locus sampling, number and position of fossil constraint and shape of prior distribution showed various insights. Deviation from node ages obtained from a reference analysis was generally highest for the shallowest nodes but determined more by temporal placement than number of fossil constraints. Calibration with only the shallowest nodes significantly underestimated the aquatic bird fossil record, indicating the presence of saturation. Although joint calibration with all six priors yielded ages most consistent with the fossil record, ages of shallow nodes were overestimated. This bias was found in both mtDNA and nDNA regions. Thus, divergence time estimation of shallow nodes may suffer from bias and low precision, even when appropriate fossil priors and best available substitution models are chosen. Much care must be taken to address the possible ramifications of substitution saturation across the entire Tree of Life.
topic Birds
Calibration
Bayesian
fossil record
molecular clock
divergence time
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2015.00203/full
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