4.6 Article

Slowdowns in Diversification Rates from Real Phylogenies May Not be Real

Journal

SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
Volume 59, Issue 4, Pages 458-464

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syq032

Keywords

Diversification rate; diversification slowdown; gamma statistic and MCCR test; species sampling; overconfidence

Funding

  1. DFG [RE 603/7-1]
  2. Direct For Biological Sciences
  3. Div Of Biological Infrastructure [1300426] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Studies of diversification patterns often find a slowing in lineage accumulation toward the present. This seemingly pervasive pattern of rate downturns has been taken as evidence for adaptive radiations, density-dependent regulation, and metacommunity species interactions. The significance of rate downturns is evaluated with statistical tests (the statistic and Monte Carlo constant rates (MCCR) test; birth death likelihood models and Akaike Information Criterion [AIC] scores) that rely on null distributions, which assume that the included species are a random sample of the entire clade. Sampling in real phylogenies, however, often is nonrandom because systematists try to include early-diverging species or representatives of previous intrataxon classifications. We studied the effects of biased sampling, structured sampling, and random sampling by experimentally pruning simulated trees (60 and 150 species) as well as a completely sampled empirical tree (58 species) and then applying the gamma statistic/MCCR test and birth death likelihood models/AIC scores to assess rate changes. For trees with random species sampling, the true model (i.e., the one fitting the complete phylogenies) could be inferred in most cases. Oversampling deep nodes, however, strongly biases inferences toward downturns, with simulations of structured and biased sampling suggesting that this occurs when sampling percentages drop below 80%. The magnitude of the effect and the sensitivity of diversification rate models is such that a useful rule of thumb may be not to infer rate downturns from real trees unless they have >80% species sampling.

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