Registering the evolutionary history in individual-based models of speciation
Authored by David M Schneider, Aguiar Marcus A M de, Carolina L N Costa, Flavia M D Marquitti, Perez S Ivan, Marlon F Ramos
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.physa.2018.05.150
Sponsors:
Brazilian Ministry of Education (CAPES)
Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)
São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
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Abstract
Understanding the emergence of biodiversity patterns in nature is a
central problem in biology. Theoretical models of speciation have
addressed this question in the macroecological scale, but little has
been done to connect microevolutionary processes with macroevolutionary
patterns. Knowledge of the evolutionary history allows the study of
patterns underlying the processes being modeled, revealing their
signatures and the role of speciation and extinction in shaping
macroevolutionary patterns. In this paper we introduce two algorithms to
record the evolutionary history of populations and species in
individual-based models of speciation, from which genealogies and
phylogenies can be constructed. The first algorithm relies on saving
ancestor-descendant relationships, generating a matrix that contains the
times to the most recent common ancestor between all pairs of
individuals at every generation (the Most Recent Common Ancestor Time
matrix, MRCAT). The second algorithm directly records all speciation and
extinction events throughout the evolutionary process, generating a
matrix with the true phylogeny of species (the Sequential Speciation and
Extinction Events, SSEE). We illustrate the use of these algorithms in a
spatially explicit individual-based model of speciation. We compare the
trees generated via MRCAT and SSEE algorithms with trees inferred by
methods that use only genetic distance between individuals of extant
species, commonly used in empirical studies and applied here to
simulated genetic data. Comparisons between trees are performed with
metrics describing the overall topology, branch length distribution and
imbalance degree. We observe that both MRCAT and distance-based trees
differ from the true phylogeny, with the first being closer to the true
tree than the second. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
patterns
Origin
Shape
Phylogenetics
Genealogies of individuals
Phylogenies of species
Macroevolutionary
patterns
Distance-based trees
Tree statistics
Dobzhansky-muller incompatibilities
Ape