1 Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University , Cambridge, MA 02138 , USA.
2 Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University , Cambridge, MA 02138 , USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2019 Jul 22;374(1777):20180248. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2018.0248. Epub 2019 Jun 3.
Evolutionary convergence has been long considered primary evidence of adaptation driven by natural selection and provides opportunities to explore evolutionary repeatability and predictability. In recent years, there has been increased interest in exploring the genetic mechanisms underlying convergent evolution, in part, owing to the advent of genomic techniques. However, the current 'genomics gold rush' in studies of convergence has overshadowed the reality that most trait classifications are quite broadly defined, resulting in incomplete or potentially biased interpretations of results. Genomic studies of convergence would be greatly improved by integrating deep 'vertical', natural history knowledge with 'horizontal' knowledge focusing on the breadth of taxonomic diversity. Natural history collections have and continue to be best positioned for increasing our comprehensive understanding of phenotypic diversity, with modern practices of digitization and databasing of morphological traits providing exciting improvements in our ability to evaluate the degree of morphological convergence. Combining more detailed phenotypic data with the well-established field of genomics will enable scientists to make progress on an important goal in biology: to understand the degree to which genetic or molecular convergence is associated with phenotypic convergence. Although the fields of comparative biology or comparative genomics alone can separately reveal important insights into convergent evolution, here we suggest that the synergistic and complementary roles of natural history collection-derived phenomic data and comparative genomics methods can be particularly powerful in together elucidating the genomic basis of convergent evolution among higher taxa. This article is part of the theme issue 'Convergent evolution in the genomics era: new insights and directions'.
进化趋同长期以来一直被认为是自然选择驱动适应的主要证据,为探索进化的可重复性和可预测性提供了机会。近年来,由于基因组技术的出现,人们越来越感兴趣地探索趋同进化的遗传机制。然而,目前在趋同研究中的“基因组淘金热”掩盖了一个现实,即大多数性状分类定义相当广泛,导致对结果的解释不完整或潜在存在偏差。通过将深入的“垂直”自然历史知识与关注分类多样性广度的“水平”知识相结合,整合趋同的基因组研究将得到极大改善。自然历史收藏具有并将继续处于提高我们对表型多样性全面理解的最佳位置,通过数字化和形态特征数据库化的现代实践,为我们评估形态趋同程度的能力提供了令人兴奋的改进。将更详细的表型数据与成熟的基因组学领域相结合,将使科学家能够在生物学的一个重要目标上取得进展:了解遗传或分子趋同与表型趋同的程度相关。尽管比较生物学或比较基因组学领域本身可以分别揭示趋同进化的重要见解,但在这里我们建议,自然历史收藏衍生的表型数据和比较基因组学方法的协同和互补作用可以特别有力地阐明高等分类群趋同进化的基因组基础。本文是主题为“基因组时代的趋同进化:新的见解和方向”的一部分。