Museum of Comparative Zoology & Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 02138, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2E9, Canada.
BMC Biol. 2020 Dec 7;18(1):191. doi: 10.1186/s12915-020-00901-5.
The vast majority of all life that ever existed on earth is now extinct and several aspects of their evolutionary history can only be assessed by using morphological data from the fossil record. Sphenodontian reptiles are a classic example, having an evolutionary history of at least 230 million years, but currently represented by a single living species (Sphenodon punctatus). Hence, it is imperative to improve the development and implementation of probabilistic models to estimate evolutionary trees from morphological data (e.g., morphological clocks), which has direct benefits to understanding relationships and evolutionary patterns for both fossil and living species. However, the impact of model choice on morphology-only datasets has been poorly explored.
Here, we investigate the impact of a wide array of model choices on the inference of evolutionary trees and macroevolutionary parameters (divergence times and evolutionary rates) using a new data matrix on sphenodontian reptiles. Specifically, we tested different clock models, clock partitioning, taxon sampling strategies, sampling for ancestors, and variations on the fossilized birth-death (FBD) tree model parameters through time. We find a strong impact on divergence times and background evolutionary rates when applying widely utilized approaches, such as allowing for ancestors in the tree and the inappropriate assumption of diversification parameters being constant through time. We compare those results with previous studies on the impact of model choice to molecular data analysis and provide suggestions for improving the implementation of morphological clocks. Optimal model combinations find the radiation of most major lineages of sphenodontians to be in the Triassic and a gradual but continuous drop in morphological rates of evolution across distinct regions of the phenotype throughout the history of the group.
We provide a new hypothesis of sphenodontian classification, along with detailed macroevolutionary patterns in the evolutionary history of the group. Importantly, we provide suggestions to avoid overestimated divergence times and biased parameter estimates using morphological clocks. Partitioning relaxed clocks offers methodological limitations, but those can be at least partially circumvented to reveal a detailed assessment of rates of evolution across the phenotype and tests of evolutionary mosaicism.
地球上曾经存在的绝大多数生命现在已经灭绝,它们的进化历史的几个方面只能通过化石记录中的形态数据来评估。喙头蜥类爬行动物就是一个典型的例子,它们的进化历史至少有 2.3 亿年,但目前仅由一个现存物种(Sphenodon punctatus)代表。因此,必须改进概率模型的开发和实施,以便从形态数据(例如形态钟)估计进化树,这对理解化石和现存物种的关系和进化模式有直接的好处。然而,模型选择对仅基于形态的数据集的影响尚未得到充分探索。
在这里,我们使用新的喙头蜥类爬行动物数据集来研究广泛的模型选择对进化树推断和宏观进化参数(分歧时间和进化率)的影响。具体来说,我们测试了不同的时钟模型、时钟分区、分类单元采样策略、祖先采样以及化石化出生-死亡(FBD)树模型参数随时间的变化。我们发现,应用广泛使用的方法(例如允许树中有祖先和不适当的假设多样化参数随时间保持不变)对分歧时间和背景进化率有强烈的影响。我们将这些结果与之前关于分子数据分析中模型选择影响的研究进行了比较,并为改进形态钟的实施提供了建议。最佳模型组合发现,喙头蜥类的大部分主要谱系的辐射发生在三叠纪,并且在该群体的历史过程中,形态学进化率在不同的表型区域逐渐下降。
我们提供了一个新的喙头蜥类分类假说,以及该群体进化历史中的详细宏观进化模式。重要的是,我们提供了一些建议,以避免使用形态钟高估分歧时间和有偏差的参数估计。放松时钟分区具有方法学上的局限性,但至少可以部分规避这些局限性,以揭示对表型中进化率的详细评估和对进化镶嵌的检验。