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How Important Is Budding Speciation for Comparative Studies?

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Author(s):
Caetano, Daniel S. ; Quental, Tiago B.
Total Authors: 2
Document type: Journal article
Source: Systematic Biology; v. 72, n. 6, p. 11-pg., 2023-11-01.
Abstract

The acknowledgment of evolutionary dependence among species has fundamentally changed how we ask biological questions. Phylogenetic models became the standard approach for studies with 3 or more lineages, in particular those using extant species. Most phylogenetic comparative methods (PCMs) translate relatedness into covariance, meaning that evolutionary changes before lineages split should be interpreted together whereas after the split lineages are expected to change independently. This clever realization has shaped decades of research. Here, we discuss one element of the comparative method often ignored or assumed as unimportant: if nodes of a phylogeny represent the dissolution of the ancestral lineage into two new ones or if the ancestral lineage can survive speciation events (i.e., budding). Budding speciation is often reported in paleontological studies, due to the nature of the evidence for budding in the fossil record, but it is surprisingly absent in comparative methods. Here, we show that many PCMs assume that divergence happens as a symmetric split, even if these methods do not explicitly mention this assumption. We discuss the properties of trait evolution models for continuous and discrete traits and their adequacy under a scenario of budding speciation. We discuss the effects of budding speciation under a series of plausible evolutionary scenarios and show when and how these can influence our estimates. We also propose that long-lived lineages that have survived through a series of budding speciation events and given birth to multiple new lineages can produce evolutionary patterns that challenge our intuition about the most parsimonious history of trait changes in a clade. We hope our discussion can help bridge comparative approaches in paleontology and neontology as well as foster awareness about the assumptions we make when we use phylogenetic trees. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 19/27212-4 - Are phylogenetic comparative models of trait evolution adequate when budding speciation is frequent?
Grantee:Daniel Caetano da Silva
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Post-Doctoral
FAPESP's process: 21/06780-4 - The deep time drivers of biodiversity at the local, regional and global scales
Grantee:Tiago Bosisio Quental
Support Opportunities: BIOTA-FAPESP Program - Young Investigators Grants - Phase 2