4.5 Article

MODELING STABILIZING SELECTION: EXPANDING THE ORNSTEIN-UHLENBECK MODEL OF ADAPTIVE EVOLUTION

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 66, Issue 8, Pages 2369-2383

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2012.01619.x

Keywords

Brownian motion; comparative method; continuous characters Hansen model; Ornstein-Uhlenbeck

Funding

  1. iPTOL program within the NSF
  2. National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis
  3. National Science Foundation
  4. U.S. Department of Homeland Security
  5. U.S. Department of Agriculture through NSF [EF-0832858]

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Comparative methods used to study patterns of evolutionary change in a continuous trait on a phylogeny range from Brownian motion processes to models where the trait is assumed to evolve according to an OrnsteinUhlenbeck (OU) process. Although these models have proved useful in a variety of contexts, they still do not cover all the scenarios biologists want to examine. For models based on the OU process, model complexity is restricted in current implementations by assuming that the rate of stochastic motion and the strength of selection do not vary among selective regimes. Here, we expand the OU model of adaptive evolution to include models that variously relax the assumption of a constant rate and strength of selection. In its most general form, the methods described here can assign each selective regime a separate trait optimum, a rate of stochastic motion parameter, and a parameter for the strength of selection. We use simulations to show that our models can detect meaningful differences in the evolutionary process, especially with larger sample sizes. We also illustrate our method using an empirical example of genome size evolution within a large flowering plant clade.

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