Authors
Frank T Burbrink, Xin Chen, Edward A Myers, Matthew C Brandley, R Alexander Pyron
Publication date
2012/12/7
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
279
Issue
1748
Pages
4817-4826
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Adaptive radiation (AR) theory predicts that groups sharing the same source of ecological opportunity (EO) will experience deterministic species diversification and morphological evolution. Thus, deterministic ecological and morphological evolution should be correlated with deterministic patterns in the tempo and mode of speciation for groups in similar habitats and time periods. We test this hypothesis using well-sampled phylogenies of four squamate groups that colonized the New World (NW) in the Late Oligocene. We use both standard and coalescent models to assess species diversification, as well as likelihood models to examine morphological evolution. All squamate groups show similar early pulses of speciation, as well as diversity-dependent ecological limits on clade size at a continental scale. In contrast, processes of morphological evolution are not easily predictable and do not show similar pulses of …
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Scholar articles
FT Burbrink, X Chen, EA Myers, MC Brandley… - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological …, 2012