Berv Jacob S, Field Daniel J
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, 215 Tower Road, Ithaca NY, 14853, USA.
Department of Geology & Geophysics, Yale University, 210 Whitney Avenue New Haven, CT, 06511, USA.
Syst Biol. 2018 Jan 1;67(1):1-13. doi: 10.1093/sysbio/syx064.
Survivorship following major mass extinctions may be associated with a decrease in body size-a phenomenon called the Lilliput Effect. Body size is a strong predictor of many life history traits (LHTs), and is known to influence demography and intrinsic biological processes. Pronounced changes in organismal size throughout Earth history are therefore likely to be associated with concomitant genome-wide changes in evolutionary rates. Here, we report pronounced heterogeneity in rates of molecular evolution (varying up to $\sim$20-fold) across a large-scale avian phylogenomic data set and show that nucleotide substitution rates are strongly correlated with body size and metabolic rate. We also identify potential body size reductions associated with the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) transition, consistent with a Lilliput Effect in the wake of that mass extinction event. We posit that selection for reduced body size across the K-Pg extinction horizon may have resulted in transient increases in substitution rate along the deepest branches of the extant avian tree of life. This "hidden" rate acceleration may result in both strict and relaxed molecular clocks over-estimating the age of the avian crown group through the relationship between life history and demographic parameters that scale with molecular substitution rate. If reductions in body size (and/or selection for related demographic parameters like short generation times) are a common property of lineages surviving mass extinctions, this phenomenon may help resolve persistent divergence time debates across the tree of life. Furthermore, our results suggest that selection for certain LHTs may be associated with deterministic molecular evolutionary outcomes.
重大大规模灭绝事件后的幸存者可能与体型减小有关——这一现象被称为小人国效应。体型是许多生活史特征(LHTs)的有力预测指标,并且已知会影响种群统计学和内在生物学过程。因此,在地球历史进程中生物体大小的显著变化很可能与进化速率在全基因组范围内的相应变化有关。在这里,我们报告了在一个大规模鸟类系统发育基因组数据集上分子进化速率存在显著的异质性(变化幅度高达约20倍),并表明核苷酸替换率与体型和代谢率密切相关。我们还确定了与白垩纪 - 古近纪(K - Pg)过渡相关的潜在体型减小,这与该大规模灭绝事件之后的小人国效应一致。我们推测,在K - Pg灭绝界限期间对较小体型的选择可能导致了沿着现存鸟类生命之树最深分支的替换率短暂增加。这种“隐藏”的速率加速可能导致严格和宽松的分子钟通过与分子替换率相关的生活史和种群统计学参数之间的关系高估鸟类冠群的年龄。如果体型减小(和/或对诸如短世代时间等相关种群统计学参数的选择)是大规模灭绝后幸存谱系的共同特征,那么这一现象可能有助于解决生命之树上长期存在的分歧时间争议。此外,我们的结果表明对某些LHTs的选择可能与确定性的分子进化结果相关。