Division of Biology, Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, Ascot, Berkshire, UK.
Syst Biol. 2010 Dec;59(6):660-73. doi: 10.1093/sysbio/syq058. Epub 2010 Oct 15.
Phylogenetic trees often depart from the expectations of stochastic models, exhibiting imbalance in diversification among lineages and slowdowns in the rate of lineage accumulation through time. Such departures have led to a widespread perception that ecological differences among species or adaptation and subsequent niche filling are required to explain patterns of diversification. However, a key element missing from models of diversification is the geographical context of speciation and extinction. In this study, we develop a spatially explicit model of geographic range evolution and cladogenesis, where speciation arises via vicariance or peripatry, and explore the effects of these processes on patterns of diversification. We compare the results with those observed in 41 reconstructed avian trees. Our model shows that nonconstant rates of speciation and extinction are emergent properties of the apportioning of geographic ranges that accompanies speciation. The dynamics of diversification exhibit wide variation, depending on the mode of speciation, tendency for range expansion, and rate of range evolution. By varying these parameters, the model is able to capture many, but not all, of the features exhibited by birth-death trees and extant bird clades. Under scenarios with relatively stable geographic ranges, strong slowdowns in diversification rates are produced, with faster rates of range dynamics leading to constant or accelerating rates of apparent diversification. A peripatric model of speciation with stable ranges also generates highly unbalanced trees typical of bird phylogenies but fails to produce realistic range size distributions among the extant species. Results most similar to those of a birth-death process are reached under a peripatric speciation scenario with highly volatile range dynamics. Taken together, our results demonstrate that considering the geographical context of speciation and extinction provides a more conservative null model of diversification and offers a very different perspective on the phylogenetic patterns expected in the absence of ecology.
系统发育树常常与随机模型的预期不符,表现出线粒体多样性的不平衡,以及随着时间的推移,线粒体积累率的减缓。这些偏离导致人们普遍认为,物种之间的生态差异或适应以及随后的生态位填补是解释多样化模式所必需的。然而,多样化模型中缺少的一个关键要素是物种形成和灭绝的地理背景。在这项研究中,我们开发了一个空间显式的地理范围进化和分支发生模型,其中物种形成通过地理隔离或边缘分布发生,并探索了这些过程对多样化模式的影响。我们将结果与 41 个重建的鸟类树的结果进行了比较。我们的模型表明,非恒定的物种形成和灭绝率是伴随物种形成而来的地理范围分配的突现属性。多样化的动态表现出广泛的变化,这取决于物种形成的模式、范围扩张的趋势和范围进化的速度。通过改变这些参数,该模型能够捕捉到许多,但不是全部,出生-死亡树和现存鸟类分支所表现出的特征。在地理范围相对稳定的情况下,产生了强烈的多样化率减缓,范围动态的更快速度导致明显多样化的恒速或加速。具有稳定范围的边缘分布物种形成模型也产生了典型的鸟类系统发育的高度不平衡的树,但未能在现存物种中产生现实的范围大小分布。在具有高度不稳定范围动态的边缘分布物种形成情景下,最接近出生-死亡过程的结果。总之,我们的结果表明,考虑物种形成和灭绝的地理背景为多样化提供了一个更保守的零模型,并为在没有生态学的情况下预期的系统发育模式提供了一个非常不同的视角。