Department of Life Sciences, Silwood Park Campus, Imperial College London, Buckhurst Road, Ascot, Berkshire, SL5 7PY, UK.
Biomathematics Research Centre, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Syst Biol. 2024 May 27;73(1):158-182. doi: 10.1093/sysbio/syad072.
Phylogenetic metrics are essential tools used in the study of ecology, evolution and conservation. Phylogenetic diversity (PD) in particular is one of the most prominent measures of biodiversity and is based on the idea that biological features accumulate along the edges of phylogenetic trees that are summed. We argue that PD and many other phylogenetic biodiversity metrics fail to capture an essential process that we term attrition. Attrition is the gradual loss of features through causes other than extinction. Here we introduce "EvoHeritage", a generalization of PD that is founded on the joint processes of accumulation and attrition of features. We argue that while PD measures evolutionary history, EvoHeritage is required to capture a more pertinent subset of evolutionary history including only components that have survived attrition. We show that EvoHeritage is not the same as PD on a tree with scaled edges; instead, accumulation and attrition interact in a more complex non-monophyletic way that cannot be captured by edge lengths alone. This leads us to speculate that the one-dimensional edge lengths of classic trees may be insufficiently flexible to capture the nuances of evolutionary processes. We derive a measure of EvoHeritage and show that it elegantly reproduces species richness and PD at opposite ends of a continuum based on the intensity of attrition. We demonstrate the utility of EvoHeritage in ecology as a predictor of community productivity compared with species richness and PD. We also show how EvoHeritage can quantify living fossils and resolve their associated controversy. We suggest how the existing calculus of PD-based metrics and other phylogenetic biodiversity metrics can and should be recast in terms of EvoHeritage accumulation and attrition.
系统发育测度是生态学、进化和保护研究中必不可少的工具。特别是系统发育多样性(PD),是生物多样性的最突出度量之一,其基于这样一种理念,即生物特征沿着系统发育树的边缘积累并加和。我们认为 PD 和许多其他系统发育生物多样性测度未能捕捉到我们称之为损耗的一个重要过程。损耗是指由于除灭绝以外的原因导致特征逐渐丧失。在这里,我们引入了“进化遗产”(EvoHeritage),这是 PD 的一种推广,其建立在特征积累和损耗的联合过程之上。我们认为,虽然 PD 度量进化历史,但为了捕捉更相关的进化历史子集,包括仅由经过损耗幸存下来的部分组成的进化历史子集,需要使用 EvoHeritage。我们表明,在具有缩放边缘的树中,EvoHeritage 与 PD 不同;相反,积累和损耗以更复杂的非单系方式相互作用,仅凭边缘长度无法捕捉到。这使我们推测,经典树的一维边缘长度可能不足以灵活地捕捉进化过程的细微差别。我们推导出了 EvoHeritage 的度量,并表明它根据损耗的强度,在连续体的相对两端巧妙地再现了物种丰富度和 PD。我们展示了 EvoHeritage 在生态学中的实用性,将其作为与物种丰富度和 PD 相比预测群落生产力的指标。我们还展示了 EvoHeritage 如何量化活化石并解决与其相关的争议。我们建议如何根据 EvoHeritage 的积累和损耗重新构建基于 PD 的度量和其他系统发育生物多样性测度的现有微积分。