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T. Garland, S. Adolph (1994)
Why Not to Do Two-Species Comparative Studies: Limitations on Inferring AdaptationPhysiological Zoology, 67
S. J. Mazer (1998)
Alternative approaches to the analysis of comparative data: compare and contrastJ. Theor. Biol, 85
J. Farris (1969)
A Successive Approximations Approach to Character WeightingSystematic Biology, 18
A. Queiroz, P. Wimberger (1993)
THE USEFULNESS OF BEHAVIOR FOR PHYLOGENY ESTIMATION: LEVELS OF HOMOPLASY IN BEHAVIORAL AND MORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERSEvolution, 47
Test for phylogenetic signal by randomization test; computes K and other MSE statistics. Allows transformation of tree prior to analyses, by user-specified value of OU or ACDC parameter
J. Clobert, T. Garland, R. Barbault (1998)
The evolution of demographic tactics in lizards: a test of some hypotheses concerning life history evolutionSyst. Biol, 11
J. Felsenstein (1985)
Phylogenies and the comparative methodPhysiol. Zool, 125
E. Martins, J. Diniz‐Filho, E. Housworth (2002)
ADAPTIVE CONSTRAINTS AND THE PHYLOGENETIC COMPARATIVE METHOD: A COMPUTER SIMULATION TEST, 56
J. Felsenstein (1988)
Phylogenies and quantitative charactersSyst. Biol, 19
P. Gibert, R. Huey (2001)
Chill‐Coma Temperature in Drosophila: Effects of Developmental Temperature, Latitude, and PhylogenyPhysiological and Biochemical Zoology, 74
D. Swiderski (2001)
The Role of Phylogenies in Comparative Biology: An Introduction to the Symposium1, 41
T. Garland, P. Harvey, A. Ives (1992)
Procedures for the Analysis of Comparative Data Using Phylogenetically Independent ContrastsSystematic Biology, 41
E. P. Martins, J. Lamont (1998)
Estimating ancestral states of a communicative display: a comparative study of Cyclura rock iguanasProc. R. Soc. London Ser. B, 55
D. Ackerly (2000)
TAXON SAMPLING, CORRELATED EVOLUTION, AND INDEPENDENT CONTRASTS, 54
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The role of inheritance in behavior.Science, 248 4952
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LIZARD HOME RANGES REVISITED: EFFECTS OF SEX, BODY SIZE, DIET, HABITAT, AND PHYLOGENYEcology, 83
J. S. Farris (1989)
The retention index and homoplasy excessAnnu. Rev. Ecol. Syst, 18
S. Pitnick (1996)
Investment in testes and the cost of making long sperm in Drosophila speciesJ. Exp. Biol, 148
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Monographs on statistics and applied probability
J. Gittleman, M. Kot (1990)
Adaptation: Statistics and a Null Model for Estimating Phylogenetic EffectsSystematic Biology, 39
M. Pagel (1999)
Inferring the historical patterns of biological evolutionNature, 401
T. Garland, R. B. Huey, A. F. Bennett (1991)
Phylogeny and thermal physiology in lizards: a reanalysisProc. R. Soc. Lond. B, 45
D. D. Ackerly, M. J. Donoghue (1998)
Leaf size, sapling al‐lometry, and Corner's rules: phylogeny and correlated evolution in maples (Acer)Am. J. Bot, 152
Kevin Bonine, T. Garland (1999)
Sprint performance of phrynosomatid lizards, measured on a high‐speed treadmill, correlates with hindlimb lengthJournal of Zoology, 248
T. Garland, K. Martin, R. Díaz-Uriarte (1997)
CHAPTER 13 – RECONSTRUCTING ANCESTRAL TRAIT VALUES USING SQUARED-CHANGE PARSIMONY: PLASMA OSMOLARITY AT THE ORIGIN OF AMNIOTES
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E. Martins, T. Hansen (1999)
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W. Maddison, M. Slatkin (1991)
NULL MODELS FOR THE NUMBER OF EVOLUTIONARY STEPS IN A CHARACTER ON A PHYLOGENETIC TREEEvolution, 45
J. Brashares, T. Garland, P. Arcese (2000)
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K. Schwenk, G. Wagner (2001)
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E. Martins, J. Lamont (1998)
Estimating ancestral states of a communicative display: a comparative study of Cyclura rock iguanasAnimal Behaviour, 55
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M. Pagel (1992)
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TRANSLATING BETWEEN MICROEVOLUTIONARY PROCESS AND MACROEVOLUTIONARY PATTERNS: THE CORRELATION STRUCTURE OF INTERSPECIFIC DATAEvolution, 50
A. Purvis, T. Garland (1993)
Polytomies in Comparative Analyses of Continuous CharactersSystematic Biology, 42
E. Derrickson, R. Ricklefs (1988)
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BEHAVIORAL ENVIRONMENTS AND EVOLUTIONARY CHANGEAnnual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 20
B. Böhning‐Gaese, R. Oberrath (1999)
Phylogenetic effects on morphological, life‐history, behavioural and ecological traits of birdsBehav. Ecol, 1
T. Garland, S. C. Adolph (1994)
Why not to do two‐species comparative studies: limitations on inferring adaptationPhysiol. Biochem. Zool, 67
M. Pagel (1994)
Detecting correlated evolution on phylogenies: a general method for the comparative analysis of discrete charactersProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences, 255
P.‐A. Cornillon, D. Pontier, M.‐J. Rochet (2000)
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J. L. Gittleman, C. G. Anderson, M. Kot, H.‐K. Luh (1996b)
New uses for new phylogeniesBrain Behav. Evol
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Using Phylogenies to Test Macroevolutionary Hypotheses of Trait Evolution in Cranes (Gruinae)The American Naturalist, 154
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Molecular systematics of the Chiroptera: a phylogenetic analysis using DNA-DNA hybridization and the comparative method
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A method for testing the assumption of phylogenetic independence in comparative dataEvolutionary Ecology Research, 1
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Passerines versus nonpasserines: so far, no statistical differences in the scaling of avian energetics.The Journal of experimental biology, 205 Pt 1
J. Antonovics, P. Tienderen (1991)
Ontoecogenophyloconstraints? The chaos of constraint terminology.Trends in ecology & evolution, 6 5
A. Cruz-Neto, Theodore Garland, Augusto Abe (2001)
Diet, phylogeny, and basal metabolic rate in phyllostomid bats.Zoology, 104 1
S. Orzack, E. Sober (2001)
Adaptationism and Optimality: Adaptation, Phylogenetic Inertia, and the Method of Controlled Comparisons
Kevin Bonine, T. Gleeson, T. Garland (2001)
Comparative analysis of fiber‐type composition in the iliofibularis muscle of phrynosomatid lizards (Squamata)Journal of Morphology, 250
R. Díaz‐Uriarte, T. Garland (1998)
Effects of branch length errors on the performance of phylogenetically independent contrastsJ. Anim. Ecol, 47
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Aspects of thermoregulation and energetics in the Procyonidae (Mammalia: Carnivora)
E. Morales (2000)
ESTIMATING PHYLOGENETIC INERTIA IN TITHONIA (ASTERACEAE): A COMPARATIVE APPROACH, 54
P. Harvey, T. Clutton‐Brock (1985)
LIFE HISTORY VARIATION IN PRIMATESEvolution, 39
T. Garland (2001)
Phylogenetic comparison and artificial selection. Two approaches in evolutionary physiology.Advances in experimental medicine and biology, 502
A. P. Møller, S. Merino, C. R. Brown, R. J. Robertson (2001)
Immune defense and host sociality: a comparative study of swallows and martinsJ. Exp. Biol, 158
D. M. Hillis, J. P. Huelsenbeck (1992)
Signal, noise, and reliability in molecular phylogenetic analysesAm. Nat, 83
L. Ebensperger, H. Cofré (2001)
On the evolution of group-living in the New World cursorial hystricognath rodentsBehavioral Ecology, 12
T. Garland, A. Dickerman, C. Janis, J. Jones (1993)
Phylogenetic Analysis of Covariance by Computer SimulationSystematic Biology, 42
M. C. McKitrick (1993)
Phylogenetic constraint in evolutionary theory: Has it any explanatory powerAm. Nat, 24
J. Wiens, Jamie Slingluff (2001)
HOW LIZARDS TURN INTO SNAKES: A PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF BODY‐FORM EVOLUTION IN ANGUID LIZARDSEvolution, 55
E. Mayr (1982)
The growth of biological thought: diversity, evolution, and inheritanceComputer Appl. Biosci
K. Schwenk, G. Wagner
Function and the Evolution of Phenotypic Stability : Connecting Pattern to Process
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Physiological plant ecology: the 39th Symposium of the British Ecological Society held at the University of York, UK, 7-9 September 1998.
D. O. Fisher, I. P. F. Owens (2000)
Female home range size and the evolution of social organization in macropod marsupialsJ Zool, 69
M. Harris, K. Steudel (1997)
Ecological correlates of hind‐limb length in the CarnivoraJournal of Zoology, 241
T. Garland (1992)
Rate Tests for Phenotypic Evolution Using Phylogenetically Independent ContrastsThe American Naturalist, 140
J. Felsenstein (1988)
Phylogenies and quantitative charactersAnnual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 19
F.‐J. Lapointe, T. Garland (2001)
A generalized permutation model for the analysis of cross‐species dataAm. Nat, 18
List of computer programs in MatLab (and one in Xlisp-Stat) These are available on request from TG. PHYSIG.DOC Documentation as Microsoft Word file
J. L. Gittleman, H.‐K. Luh (1992)
On comparing comparative methodsJ. Hered, 23
A. Purvis (1995)
A composite estimate of primate phylogenyJ. Ecol, 348
D. Schluter, T. Price, A. Mooers, D. Ludwig (1997)
LIKELIHOOD OF ANCESTOR STATES IN ADAPTIVE RADIATIONEvolution, 51
E. Martins (1996)
PHYLOGENIES, SPATIAL AUTOREGRESSION, AND THE COMPARATIVE METHOD: A COMPUTER SIMULATION TESTEvolution, 50
S. P. Blomberg, T. Garland (2002)
Tempo and mode in evolution: phylogenetic inertia, adaptation and comparative methodsJ. Morphol, 15
G. Wagner, K. Schwenk (2000)
Evolutionarily Stable Configurations: Functional Integration and the Evolution of Phenotypic Stability
P. Legendre, F. Lapointe, P. Casgrain (1994)
MODELING BRAIN EVOLUTION FROM BEHAVIOR: A PERMUTATIONAL REGRESSION APPROACHEvolution, 48
Theodore Garland, Ramón Díaz-Uriarte (1999)
Polytomies and phylogenetically independent contrasts: examination of the bounded degrees of freedom approach.Systematic biology, 48 3
T. Garland, R. Díaz‐Uriarte (1999)
Polytomies and phy‐logenetically independent contrasts: an examination of the bounded degrees of freedom approachSyst. Zool, 48
P. Cornillon, D. Pontier, M. Rochet (2000)
Autoregressive models for estimating phylogenetic and environmental effects: accounting for within-species variations.Journal of theoretical biology, 202 4
P. Harvey, S. Nee (1993)
New uses for new phylogeniesEuropean Review, 1
A. Purvis (1995)
A composite estimate of primate phylogeny.Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 348 1326
E. Martins, T. Garland (1991)
PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSES OF THE CORRELATED EVOLUTION OF CONTINUOUS CHARACTERS: A SIMULATION STUDYEvolution, 45
Trevor Price (1997)
Correlated evolution and independent contrasts.Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 352 1352
W. Calder (1988)
Size, Function, and Life History
J. B. Losos, D. B. Miles (2002)
Testing the hypothesis that a clade has adaptively radiated: iguanid lizard clades as a case studyProc. R. Soc. Lond. B, 160
T. Garland (2001)
Hypoxia: from genes to the bedside. Advances in experimental biology and medicine. Vol. 502Am. Zool
T. Garland, S. Adolph (1991)
Physiological Differentiation of Vertebrate PopulationsAnnual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 22
F. Rohlf (2001)
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M. Björklund (1997)
Are 'comparative methods' always necessary ?Oikos, 80
S. H. Ferguson, S. Lariviere (2002)
Can comparing life histories help conserve carnivoresAm. Nat, 5
P. Schmidt (1985)
The Theory and Practice of Econometrics
Jamie Dixson, M. Forstner, D. Garcı́a (2002)
The α-Actinin Gene Family: A Revised ClassificationJournal of Molecular Evolution, 56
E. Martins, T. Hansen (1997)
Phylogenies and the Comparative Method: A General Approach to Incorporating Phylogenetic Information into the Analysis of Interspecific DataThe American Naturalist, 149
J. Gittleman, H. Luh (1992)
On Comparing Comparative MethodsAnnual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 23
D. Roff (1992)
The evolution of life histories : theory and analysis
T. Garland, S. C. Adolph (1991)
Physiological differentiation of vertebrate populationsAm. Nat, 22
P. Harvey, M. Pagel (1991)
The comparative method in evolutionary biology
K. E. Bonine, T. T. Gleeson, T. Garland (2001)
Comparative analysis of fiber‐type composition in the iliofibularis muscle of phrynosomatid lizards (Sauria)Am. J. Phys. Anthropol, 250
J. Losos (1999)
Uncertainty in the reconstruction of ancestral character states and limitations on the use of phylogenetic comparative methodsAnimal Behaviour, 58
M. Westoby, M. Leishman, J. Lord (1995)
On misinterpreting the phylogenetic correctionJournal of Ecology, 83
(2000)
Sexual size APPENDIX 1
Timothy Mousseau, D. Roff (1987)
Natural selection and the heritability of fitness componentsHeredity, 59
E. M. Derrickson, R. E. Ricklefs (1988)
Taxon‐dependent diversification of life‐history traits and the perception of phylo‐genetic constraintsAm. Nat, 2
Stephen Steams (1983)
The influence of size and phylogeny on patterns of covariation among life-history traits in the mammals
Paul Harvey, A. Rambaut (2000)
Comparative analyses for adaptive radiations.Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 355 1403
M. Kottler, E. Mayr (1983)
A History of Biology: Diversity, Evolution, Inheritance@@@The Growth of Biological Thought. Diversity, Evolution, and InheritanceEvolution, 37
P. Harvey, A. Rambaut (1998)
Phylogenetic extinction rates and comparative methodologyProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences, 265
D. Fisher, I. Owens (2000)
Female home range size and the evolution of social organization in macropod marsupialsJournal of Animal Ecology, 69
D. D. Ackerly, P. B. Reich (1999)
Convergence and correlations among leaf size and function in seed plants: a comparative test using independent contrastsThe chaos of constraint terminology Trends Ecol. Evol, 86
S. Blomberg, T. Garland (2002)
Tempo and mode in evolution: phylogenetic inertia, adaptation and comparative methodsJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 15
M. Benton (1997)
Amniote origins: completing the transition to land
J. Losos, D. Miles (2002)
Testing the Hypothesis That a Clade Has Adaptively Radiated: Iguanid Lizard Clades as a Case StudyThe American Naturalist, 160
A. Purvis, A. Rambaut (1995)
Comparative analysis by independent contrasts (CAIC): an Apple Macintosh application for analysing comparative dataComputer applications in the biosciences : CABIOS, 11 3
(2001)
Adaptation, phylogenetic inertia, and the method of controlled comparisons Adaptationism and optimality
S. Ferguson, S. Larivière (2002)
Can comparing life histories help conserve carnivores?Animal Conservation, 5
T. Garland, C. Janis (1993)
Does metatarsal/femur ratio predict maximal running speed in cursorial mammals?Journal of Zoology, 229
J. B. Losos (1999)
Uncertainty in the reconstruction of ancestral character states and limitations on the use of phylogenetic comparative methodsAm. Nat, 58
A. Iwaniuk, J. Nelson (2001)
A Comparative Analysis of Relative Brain Size in Waterfowl (Anseriformes)Brain, Behavior and Evolution, 57
A. Purvis, J. Gittleman, H. Luh (1994)
Truth or Consequences: Effects of Phylogenetic Accuracy on Two Comparative MethodsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 167
D. Stirling, D. Réale, D. Roff (2002)
Selection, structure and the heritability of behaviourJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 15
M. A. Harris, K. Steudel (1997)
Ecological correlates of hind‐limb length in the CarnivoraEcol. Monogr, 241
K. Ashton (2001)
BODY SIZE VARIATION AMONG MAINLAND POPULATIONS OF THE WESTERN RATTLESNAKE (CROTALUS VIRIDIS), 55
V. Pierce, Douglas Crawford, Douglas Crawford (1997)
Phylogenetic analysis of glycolytic enzyme expression.Science, 276 5310
R. Díaz-Uriarte, T. Garland (1996)
TESTING HYPOTHESES OF CORRELATED EVOLUTION USING PHYLOGENETICALLY INDEPENDENT CONTRASTS: SENSITIVITY TO DEVIATIONS FROM BROWNIAN MOTIONSystematic Biology, 45
(1994)
Investigating the origins of performance advantage: adaptation, exaptation and lineage effects
Richard Smith, J. Cheverud (2002)
Scaling of Sexual Dimorphism in Body Mass: A Phylogenetic Analysis of Rensch's Rule in PrimatesInternational Journal of Primatology, 23
C. Wolf, Theodore Garland, Brad Griffith
Predictors of Avian and Mammalian Translocation Success: Reanalysis with Phylogenetically Independent Contrasts
C. Nunn, R. Barton (2000)
Allometric Slopes and Independent Contrasts: A Comparative Test of Kleiber’s Law in Primate Ranging PatternsThe American Naturalist, 156
L. A. Ebensperger, H. Cofre (2001)
On the evolution of group‐living in the New World cursorial hystricognath rodentsAm. Nat, 12
C. Sibley, J. Ahlquist (1991)
Phylogeny and Classification of the Birds: A Study in Molecular Evolution
(1993)
Morphometric variation of the hindlimb of waders and its evolutionary implications
Jean Clobert, Theodore Garland, Robert Barbault (1998)
The evolution of demographic tactics in lizards: a test of some hypotheses concerning life history evolutionJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 11
M. Butler, T. Schoener, J. Losos (2000)
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SEXUAL SIZE DIMORPHISM AND HABITAT USE IN GREATER ANTILLEAN ANOLIS LIZARDS, 54
A. Møller, S. Merino, C. Brown, R. Robertson (2001)
Immune Defense and Host Sociality: A Comparative Study of Swallows and MartinsThe American Naturalist, 158
T. Székely, J. Reynolds, J. Figuerola (2000)
SEXUAL SIZE DIMORPHISM IN SHOREBIRDS, GULLS, AND ALCIDS: THE INFLUENCE OF SEXUAL AND NATURAL SELECTION, 54
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Phylogenetic lability and rates of evolution: a comparison of behavioral, morphological and life history traits
P. Gibert, R. B. Huey (2001)
Chill‐coma temperature in Dro‐sophilaProc. R. Soc. Lond. B, 74
D. Ackerly, M. Donoghue (1998)
Leaf Size, Sapling Allometry, and Corner's Rules: Phylogeny and Correlated Evolution in Maples (Acer)The American Naturalist, 152
Converts phylogenetic variance-covariance matrix to bracket format phylogenetic tree and vice versa. Particularly useful for visualizing results of OU and ACDC transformations
A. Purvis, A. Rambaut (1995)
Comparative analysis by independent contrasts (CAIC): an Apple Macintosh application for analysing comparative dataBiol. Conserv, 11
T. Hansen (1997)
STABILIZING SELECTION AND THE COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF ADAPTATIONEvolution, 51
K. Böhning‐Gaese, R. Oberrath (1999)
Phylogenetic effects on morphological, life-history, behavioural and ecological traits of birdsEvolutionary Ecology Research, 1
James Jackson, D. Adams, Ursula Jackson (1999)
Allometry of Constitutive Defense: A Model and a Comparative Test with Tree Bark and Fire RegimeThe American Naturalist, 153
A. Barbosa, E. Moreno (1999)
EVOLUTION OF FORAGING STRATEGIES IN SHOREBIRDS: AN ECOMORPHOLOGICAL APPROACHThe Auk, 116
D. Jablonski (1987)
Heritability at the Species Level: Analysis of Geographic Ranges of Cretaceous MollusksScience, 238
Christopher Starr (1984)
Sperm competition and the evolution of animal mating systems
T. Garland (1992)
Rate tests for phenotypic evolution using phylogenetically independent contrastsSyst. Biol, 140
M. D. Pagel (1994)
Detecting correlated evolution on phylogenies: a general method for the comparative analysis of discrete charactersJ. Evol. Biol, 255
T. Jr., A. Ives (2000)
Using the Past to Predict the Present: Confidence Intervals for Regression Equations in Phylogenetic Comparative MethodsThe American Naturalist, 155
T. Garland, P. Midford, A. Ives (1999)
An Introduction to Phylogenetically Based Statistical Methods, with a New Method for Confidence Intervals on Ancestral ValuesIntegrative and Comparative Biology, 39
J. L. Gittleman, M. Kot (1990)
Adaptation: statistics and a null model for estimating phylogenetic effectsProc. R. Soc. Lond. B, 39
Ramón Díaz-Uriarte, Theodore Garland (1998)
Effects of branch length errors on the performance of phylogenetically independent contrasts.Systematic biology, 47 4
J. Felsenstein (1985)
Phylogenies and the Comparative MethodThe American Naturalist, 125
R. Freckleton, P. Harvey, M. Pagel (2002)
Phylogenetic Analysis and Comparative Data: A Test and Review of EvidenceThe American Naturalist, 160
A. Harcourt, P. Harvey, S. Larson, R. Short (1981)
Testis weight, body weight and breeding system in primatesNature, 293
J. B. Losos (2000)
Ecological character displacement and the study of adaptationJ. Theor. Biol, 97
G. Horridge (1964)
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Abstract The primary rationale for the use of phylogenetically based statistical methods is that phylogenetic signal, the tendency for related species to resemble each other, is ubiquitous. Whether this assertion is true for a given trait in a given lineage is an empirical question, but general tools for detecting and quantifying phylogenetic signal are inadequately developed. We present new methods for continuous‐valued characters that can be implemented with either phylogenetically independent contrasts or generalized least‐squares models. First, a simple randomization procedure allows one to test the null hypothesis of no pattern of similarity among relatives. The test demonstrates correct Type I error rate at a nominal α= 0.05 and good power (0.8) for simulated datasets with 20 or more species. Second, we derive a descriptive statistic, K, which allows valid comparisons of the amount of phylogenetic signal across traits and trees. Third, we provide two biologically motivated branch‐length transformations, one based on the Ornstein‐Uhlenbeck (OU) model of stabilizing selection, the other based on a new model in which character evolution can accelerate or decelerate (ACDC) in rate (e.g., as may occur during or after an adaptive radiation). Maximum likelihood estimation of the OU (d) and ACDC (g) parameters can serve as tests for phylogenetic signal because an estimate of d or g near zero implies that a phylogeny with little hierarchical structure (a star) offers a good fit to the data. Transformations that improve the fit of a tree to comparative data will increase power to detect phylogenetic signal and may also be preferable for further comparative analyses, such as of correlated character evolution. Application of the methods to data from the literature revealed that, for trees with 20 or more species, 92% of traits exhibited significant phylogenetic signal (randomization test), including behavioral and ecological ones that are thought to be relatively evolutionarily malleable (e.g., highly adaptive) and/or subject to relatively strong environmental (nongenetic) effects or high levels of measurement error. Irrespective of sample size, most traits (but not body size, on average) showed less signal than expected given the topology, branch lengths, and a Brownian motion model of evolution (i.e., K was less than one), which may be attributed to adaptation and/or measurement error in the broad sense (including errors in estimates of phenotypes, branch lengths, and topology). Analysis of variance of log K for all 121 traits (from 35 trees) indicated that behavioral traits exhibit lower signal than body size, morphological, life‐history, or physiological traits. In addition, physiological traits (corrected for body size) showed less signal than did body size itself. For trees with 20 or more species, the estimated OU (25% of traits) and/or ACDC (40%) transformation parameter differed significantly from both zero and unity, indicating that a hierarchical tree with less (or occasionally more) structure than the original better fit the data and so could be preferred for comparative analyses.
Evolution – Oxford University Press
Published: Apr 1, 2003
Keywords: ; ; ; ; ; ;
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