Exploring the relationship between trait evolution and the generation of species diversity

Macroevolutionary questions, such as "why do some lineages diversify faster than others?", are often studied by investigating key traits related to species’ ecology and life-history. Many traits have been hypothesized to affect rates of diversification and often it is these traits that are...

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Main Author: Magnuson-Ford, Karen
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39811
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-398112018-01-05T17:25:30Z Exploring the relationship between trait evolution and the generation of species diversity Magnuson-Ford, Karen Macroevolutionary questions, such as "why do some lineages diversify faster than others?", are often studied by investigating key traits related to species’ ecology and life-history. Many traits have been hypothesized to affect rates of diversification and often it is these traits that are used to address another macroevolutionary question: "do traits evolve gradually over time or in punctuated bursts during speciation?" Using phylogenetic data and species’ present-day trait information, I present a novel approach to assess the mode of character change while accounting for state-dependent speciation and extinction. The model, Binary-State Speciation and Extinction - node enhanced state shift (BiSSE-ness), estimates both the rate of change occurring along lineages and the probability of change occurring during speciation, while simultaneously estimating the speciation and extinction rates for each character state. Using simulations, I found BiSSE-ness is able to distinguish along-lineage and speciational change and precisely estimate the parameters associated with character change and diversification rates. I applied BiSSE-ness to an empirical primate data set examining five traits related to ecology, behaviour, and reproduction. I provide evidence that changes in primate habitat type may be associated with speciation, whereas changes in social behaviour and mating system occur mainly along lineages. The BiSSE-ness model is flexible in that it may be used to address questions regarding species diversification, regardless of whether the trait changes in a manner that is proportional to time or to the number of speciation events. However, in cases where the trait is linked to the speciation process itself, such as niche-related traits, BiSSE-ness provides a suitable framework in which to simultaneously address questions regarding species’ diversification and character change. Science, Faculty of Zoology, Department of Graduate 2011-12-21T17:59:37Z 2011-12-21T17:59:37Z 2011 2012-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39811 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Macroevolutionary questions, such as "why do some lineages diversify faster than others?", are often studied by investigating key traits related to species’ ecology and life-history. Many traits have been hypothesized to affect rates of diversification and often it is these traits that are used to address another macroevolutionary question: "do traits evolve gradually over time or in punctuated bursts during speciation?" Using phylogenetic data and species’ present-day trait information, I present a novel approach to assess the mode of character change while accounting for state-dependent speciation and extinction. The model, Binary-State Speciation and Extinction - node enhanced state shift (BiSSE-ness), estimates both the rate of change occurring along lineages and the probability of change occurring during speciation, while simultaneously estimating the speciation and extinction rates for each character state. Using simulations, I found BiSSE-ness is able to distinguish along-lineage and speciational change and precisely estimate the parameters associated with character change and diversification rates. I applied BiSSE-ness to an empirical primate data set examining five traits related to ecology, behaviour, and reproduction. I provide evidence that changes in primate habitat type may be associated with speciation, whereas changes in social behaviour and mating system occur mainly along lineages. The BiSSE-ness model is flexible in that it may be used to address questions regarding species diversification, regardless of whether the trait changes in a manner that is proportional to time or to the number of speciation events. However, in cases where the trait is linked to the speciation process itself, such as niche-related traits, BiSSE-ness provides a suitable framework in which to simultaneously address questions regarding species’ diversification and character change. === Science, Faculty of === Zoology, Department of === Graduate
author Magnuson-Ford, Karen
spellingShingle Magnuson-Ford, Karen
Exploring the relationship between trait evolution and the generation of species diversity
author_facet Magnuson-Ford, Karen
author_sort Magnuson-Ford, Karen
title Exploring the relationship between trait evolution and the generation of species diversity
title_short Exploring the relationship between trait evolution and the generation of species diversity
title_full Exploring the relationship between trait evolution and the generation of species diversity
title_fullStr Exploring the relationship between trait evolution and the generation of species diversity
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the relationship between trait evolution and the generation of species diversity
title_sort exploring the relationship between trait evolution and the generation of species diversity
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39811
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