1 / 67

Phylogenetic comparative trait and community analyses

Phylogenetic comparative trait and community analyses. Questions. Discussions: Robbie: posting paper and questions for this week Vania & Samoa: will be picking a paper to post for week after spring break Reschedule Monday’s class? 9:30-10:45 Wed in Benton 240 Any questions?. Ferns.

brooks
Download Presentation

Phylogenetic comparative trait and community analyses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Phylogenetic comparative trait and community analyses

  2. Questions • Discussions: • Robbie: posting paper and questions for this week • Vania & Samoa: will be picking a paper to post for week after spring break • Reschedule Monday’s class? • 9:30-10:45 Wed in Benton 240 • Any questions?

  3. Ferns Gymnosperms Angiosperms

  4. Part 1: Evolutionary trees • What is systematics? • What are phylogenies? • Why are phylogenies useful? • Background information

  5. What is systematics? • Systematics is the study of the diversity of organisms and the relationships among these organisms

  6. Ways to examine relationships • Evolutionary systematics: Based on similarity as determined by expert (Mayr, Simpson) • Phenetics: Based on overall similarity (Rolf, Sokal, Sneath) • Cladistics: Based on shared derived characters (synapomorphies; Hennig)

  7. Ways to examine relationships • Cladistics: Based on synapomorphies • Maximum Parsimony: Form the shortest possible tree (based on minimum steps) • Maximum Likelihood: Based on probability of change in character state and then calculate likelihood that a tree would lead to data (useful for molecular data) • Bayesian Inference: Based on the likelihood that the data would lead to the tree based on prior probabilities assigned using Bayes Theorem

  8. Part 1: Evolutionary trees • What is systematics? • What are phylogenies? • Why are phylogenies useful? • Background information

  9. a b c node 1 ch. 3 ch. 2 node 2 ch. 1 What are phylogenies? • Phylogenies are our hypotheses of evolutionary relationships among groups (taxa or taxon for singular) • Graphically represented by trees • When based on shared derived characters = cladogram

  10. Part 1: Evolutionary trees • What is systematics? • What are phylogenies? • Why are phylogenies useful? • Background information

  11. Why are phylogenies useful? • Useful for studying • Evolutionary relationships • Evolution of characters: Correlated (PICs vs. sister pairs), Signal, Partition variation, Ancestral state, Simulations • Types (Brownian vs. OU) and rates of evolution (Homogenous vs. heterogeneous) • Group ages (fossils, biogeography) • Diversity/Diversification: Speciation vs. Extinction? • Biogeographic history • Community phylogenetics • Phyloclimatic modeling and conservation • Assist in • Identification • Classification

  12. Part 1: Evolutionary trees • What is systematics? • What are phylogenies? • Why are phylogenies useful? • Background information

  13. Background information • Trees • Characters • Groups • Other

  14. Trees • Tips: Living taxa • Nodes: Common ancestor • Branches: Can represent time since divergence • Root: Common ancestor to all species in study tips a b c node 1 branch node 2 root

  15. a d b c Trees • Sister group: Closest relative to a taxon • c and d are sister • b = sister to c,d • a = sister to b,c,d

  16. a d b c Trees • Our goal is to make bifurcating trees • But a polytomy is when we are unable to resolve which are the sister taxa (hard vs. soft)

  17. Trees • Phylogenetic trees can be rotated around their nodes and not change the relationships a b c d b c a d

  18. Trees • Toplogy: shape • Branch lengths: differentiation (e.g., 1 = punctuated, speciational) or time = ultrametric

  19. Characters • Characters: Attribute (e.g., morphological, genetic) • Eye color • Production of flowers • Position 33 in gene X • Character state: Value of that character • Blue, green, hazel, brown • Yes, No • A, T, G, C

  20. Picking Characters • Variable • Heritable • Comparable (homologous) • Independent

  21. Characters • Homology: A character is homologous in > 2 taxa if found or derived from their common ancestor 1 1 1 or 1’ homologous

  22. Homology • Homology is determined by: • Similar position or structures • Similar during development • Similar genetically • Evolutionary character series (transformational homology) from ancestor to descendents

  23. Characters • Homoplasy: A character is homoplasious in > 2 taxa if the common ancestor did not have this character 1 1 0 analogous

  24. Homoplasy • Due to • Convergent evolution: Similar character states in unrelated taxa • Reversals: A derived character state returns to the ancestral state

  25. Characters • Apomorphy: Derived character • Pleisiomorphy: Ancestral character a b c ch. 2 ch. 1

  26. Characters • Synapomorphy: Shared derived character • Autapomorphy: Uniquely derived character • Symplesiomorphy: Shared ancestral character 1,2,3,4 1,2,3,6 1,4,5 a b c ch. 6 ch. 4 ch. 5 node 1 chs. 2, 3 = Synapomorphies chs. 5, 6 = Autapomorphies ch. 1 = Symplesiomorphy ch. 4 = False synapomorphy ch. 4 ch. 3 ch. 2 node 2 ch. 1

  27. a d b c Monophyletic groups • Monophyletic groups: Contain the common ancestor and all of its descendents • What are the monophyletic groups? • c,d • b,c,d • a,b,c,d

  28. a d b c Other groups (not recognized) • Paraphyletic groups: Contain the common ancestor and some of its descendents ch. 1 Based on sympleisiomorphic character

  29. Other groups (not recognized) • Polyphyletic groups: Descendants with 2 or more ancestral sources c a d b e ch. 4 Based on false synapomorphy

  30. Getting trees • From the literature, Phylomatic, Genbank, collect data yourself (may need name scrubbing tools: Phylomatic, TaxonScrubber) • Methods for assembly: Supertree, Supermatrix, Megatree, Zip them together • Getting the topology vs. getting branch lengths? • Discord among trees based on different characters? Gene trees vs. species trees

  31. Storing trees • Newick: ((b:1, c:1), a:1):1; • Nexus (output of Paup) • Pagel • Distance matrix a b c

  32. Part 2: Hypothesis Testing Using Evolutionary Trees

  33. Part 2: Hypothesis testing http://treetapper.org/, http://cran.r-project.org/web/views/Phylogenetics.html • What sort of hypotheses can we test? • Phylogeography • Evolutionary dating • Phylogenetic community structure • Coevolution/Cospeciation • Mapping characters • Types of characters • Correlated Change • Dependent Change • Phylogenetic Signal

  34. When do we need to use phylogenies? • Is it always necessary in ecological questions? • Yes, taxa are not independent points so we must “correct for” phylogeny • Sometimes, it is interesting to “incorporate” phylogenetic hypotheses to see how they influence our analyses • No, evolutionary questions can be asked by incorporating phylogenies but each species represents a separate successful event and should be analyzed with that in mind

  35. Part 2: Hypothesis testing • What sort of hypotheses can we test? • Phylogenetic community structure • Mapping characters • Types of characters • Correlated Change • Dependent Change • Phylogenetic Signal

  36. Phylogenetic Community Structure • Webb (2000) tested the alternate hypotheses that co-occurring species are (1) more or (2) less closely related than a random assembly of species • He examined the phylogenetic structure in 28 plots in 150 ha of Bornean forest

  37. Phylogenetic Community Structure • He found species were more closely related than a random distribution

  38. Phylogenetic Community Structure • Recent development of metrics: • NRI, NTI, PSV, PSC • Do you use abundance or presence/absence? • What regional pool do you compare to? • What null models should you use?

  39. Part 2: Hypothesis testing • What sort of hypotheses can we test? • Phylogenetic community structure • Mapping characters • Types of characters • Correlated Change • Dependent Change • Phylogenetic Signal

  40. Mapping Characters • Once we have a known phylogeny, we can map on characters of interest to test hypotheses • The phylogeny must be built on characters independent of those of interest

  41. Types of Characters • If we have a character that appears in a number of taxa, we may • Test the alternate hypotheses that it is (1) analogous or (2) homologous • Test hypotheses as to which state is ancestral and derived • We can map the character onto the phylogeny to test these hypotheses

  42. Homologous vs. Analogous Characters

  43. Part 2: Hypothesis testing • What sort of hypotheses can we test? • Phylogenetic community structure • Mapping characters • Types of characters • Correlated Change • Dependent Change • Phylogenetic Signal

  44. Branch size Correlated Change • Comparative biologists often try to test hypotheses about the relationships between two or more characters by taking measurements across many species • Seed size and seedling size • Body mass and surface area • Fruit size and branch size Fruit size

  45. Correlated Change • We might want to ask whether the correlation between traits is due to repeated coordinated evolutionary divergences • We might expect closely related species to resemble one another

  46. Branch size Correlated Change • If our phylogeny looked something like this • Then all of the change is really the result of one evolutionary event Fruit size

  47. Correlated Change • To incorporate phylogeny into comparative analyses, looking for correlated change, we can use • Sister pairs analyses • Felsenstein’s Independent Contrasts • Grafen’s Phylogenetic regression (ML and Bayesian approaches too) • Pagel’s Discrete and Multistate (Change in character state)

  48. Sign test: 32 of 45 are negative (p < 0.01) Strychnos 3 2 1 Hamelia 0 Miconia -1 trees & lianas shrubs

  49. Correlated Change • To incorporate phylogeny into comparative analyses, looking for correlated change, we can use • Sister pairs analyses • Felsenstein’s Independent Contrasts (Brownian) • Grafen’s Phylogenetic regression (Other models) • ML and Bayesian approaches too • Pagel’s Discrete and Multistate (Change in character state)

More Related