Authors
Simon P Loader, Davide Pisani, James A Cotton, David J Gower, Julia J Day, Mark Wilkinson
Publication date
2007/10/22
Journal
Biology Letters
Volume
3
Issue
5
Pages
505-508
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Parallel patterns of distribution in different lineages suggest a common cause. Explanations in terms of a single biogeographic event often imply contemporaneous diversifications. Phylogenies with absolute time scales provide the most obvious means of testing temporal components of biogeographic hypotheses but, in their absence, the sequence of diversification events and whether any could have been contemporaneous can be tested with relative date estimates. Tests using relative time scales have been largely overlooked, but because they do not require the calibration upon which absolute time scales depend, they make a large amount of existing molecular data of use to historical biogeography and may also be helpful when calibration is possible but uncertain. We illustrate the use of relative dating by testing the hypothesis that parallel, disjunct east/west distributions in three independent lineages of African …
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