Davis Katie E, Page Roderic D M
Department of Biology & Biochemistry, University of Bath, Bath, UK.
Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine College of Medical, Vetinary and Life Sciences University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
PLoS Curr. 2014 Jun 9;6:ecurrents.tol.c1af68dda7c999ed9f1e4b2d2df7a08e. doi: 10.1371/currents.tol.c1af68dda7c999ed9f1e4b2d2df7a08e.
Our knowledge of the avian tree of life remains uncertain, particularly at deeper levels due to the rapid diversification early in their evolutionary history. They are the most abundant land vertebrate on the planet and have been of great historical interest to systematists. Birds are also economically and ecologically important and as a result are intensively studied, yet despite their importance and interest to humans around 13% of taxa currently on the endangered species list perhaps as a result of human activity. Despite all this no comprehensive phylogeny that includes both extinct and extant species currently exists. Here we present a species-level supertree, constructed using the Matrix Representation with Parsimony method, of Aves containing approximately two thirds of all species from nearly 1000 source phylogenies with a broad taxonomic coverage. The source data for the tree were collected and processed according to a strict protocol to ensure robust and accurate data handling. The resulting tree topology is largely consistent with molecular hypotheses of avian phylogeny. We identify areas that are in broad agreement with current views on avian systematics and also those that require further work. We also highlight the need for leaf-based support measures to enable the identification of rogue taxa in supertrees. This is a first attempt at a supertree of both extinct and extant birds, it is not intended to be utilised in an overhaul of avian systematics or as a basis for taxonomic re-classification but provides a strong basis on which to base further studies on macroevolution, conservation, biodiversity, comparative biology and character evolution, in particular the inclusion of fossils will allow the study of bird evolution and diversification throughout deep time.
我们对鸟类生命之树的了解仍然不确定,特别是在进化历史早期快速分化导致的更深层次上。鸟类是地球上数量最多的陆地脊椎动物,一直是系统学家们极大的历史研究兴趣所在。鸟类在经济和生态方面也很重要,因此受到深入研究,然而尽管它们对人类很重要且备受关注,但目前约13%的分类群可能由于人类活动而被列入濒危物种名单。尽管如此,目前还不存在一个包含已灭绝和现存物种的全面系统发育树。在此,我们展示了一个物种水平的超树,它是使用简约法的矩阵表示法构建的,涵盖了来自近1000个源系统发育树中约三分之二的所有鸟类物种,具有广泛的分类覆盖范围。构建这棵树的源数据是按照严格的协议收集和处理的,以确保数据处理的稳健性和准确性。所得的树拓扑结构在很大程度上与鸟类系统发育的分子假说一致。我们确定了与当前鸟类系统学观点广泛一致的领域,以及那些需要进一步研究的领域。我们还强调了基于叶的支持措施的必要性,以便在超树中识别异常分类群。这是对已灭绝和现存鸟类超树的首次尝试,它并非旨在用于鸟类系统学的全面修订或作为分类重新分类的基础,而是为进一步研究宏观进化、保护、生物多样性、比较生物学和性状进化提供了坚实的基础,特别是纳入化石将有助于研究鸟类在漫长时间里的进化和多样化。