Milner Centre for Evolution, Department of Biology & Biochemistry, University of Bath, Bath, UK.
Vertebrates Division, Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London, UK.
Commun Biol. 2022 May 31;5(1):521. doi: 10.1038/s42003-022-03482-x.
Phylogenetic relationships are inferred principally from two classes of data: morphological and molecular. Currently, most phylogenies of extant taxa are inferred from molecules and when morphological and molecular trees conflict the latter are often preferred. Although supported by simulations, the superiority of molecular trees has rarely been assessed empirically. Here we test phylogenetic accuracy using two independent data sources: biogeographic distributions and fossil first occurrences. For 48 pairs of morphological and molecular trees we show that, on average, molecular trees provide a better fit to biogeographic data than their morphological counterparts and that biogeographic congruence increases over research time. We find no significant differences in stratigraphic congruence between morphological and molecular trees. These results have implications for understanding the distribution of homoplasy in morphological data sets, the utility of morphology as a test of molecular hypotheses and the implications of analysing fossil groups for which molecular data are unavailable.
形态学和分子学。目前,大多数现生物种的系统发育是根据分子推断得出的,而当形态学和分子树发生冲突时,通常更倾向于使用后者。尽管模拟实验支持这一观点,但分子树的优越性很少被经验性地评估。在这里,我们使用两个独立的数据源来测试系统发育的准确性:生物地理分布和化石首次出现的时间。对于 48 对形态学和分子学的系统发育树,我们表明,平均而言,分子树比形态学系统发育树更能适应生物地理数据,并且生物地理一致性随着研究时间的推移而增加。我们没有发现形态学和分子学系统发育树在地层一致性上有显著差异。这些结果对理解形态数据集同形性的分布、形态学作为分子假说检验的有效性以及分析缺乏分子数据的化石群体的意义具有重要影响。