Artículos de revistas
Using phylogenetic information and the comparative method to evaluate hypotheses in macroecology
Fecha
2013Registro en:
Methods in Ecology and Evolution, Volumen 4, Issue 5, 2018, Pages 401-415
2041210X
10.1111/2041-210X.12033
Autor
Hernández, Cristián E.
Rodríguez-Serrano, Enrique
Avaria-Llautureo, Jorge
Inostroza-Michael, Oscar
Morales-Pallero, Bryan
Boric-Bargetto, Dusan
Canales-Aguirre, Cristian B.
Marquet, Pablo A.
Meade, Andrew
Institución
Resumen
It is widely recognized that macroecological patterns are not independent of the evolution of the lineages involved in generating these patterns. While many researchers have begun to evaluate the effect of ancestor-descendant relationships on observed patterns using the phylogenetic comparative method, most macroecological studies only utilize the cross-sectional comparative method to 'remove the phylogenetic history', without considering the option of evaluating its effect without removing it. Currently, most researchers use this method without explicitly evaluating three fundamental evolutionary assumptions of the comparative method: (i) that the phylogeny is constructed without error (which implies evaluating phylogenetic uncertainty); (ii) that more closely related species tend to show more similar characters than expected by chance (which implies evaluating the phylogenetic signal) and; (iii) that the model of the characters' evolution effectively recapitulates their history (whic