Skip to main content
The University of British Columbia
UBC - A Place of Mind
The University of British Columbia
Faculty of Science Department of Zoology

Main navigation

  • About
    • Department History
    • News
    • Departmental Announcements
    • In Memoriam
    • Contacts and Information
    • Jobs
    • Buildings
    • Cycling
    • Parking
    • Transit
    • Walking
  • People
    • Faculty - Research
    • Faculty - Educational leadership
    • Lecturers
    • Staff
    • Graduate Students
    • Postdoctoral Fellows
    • Associate Members
    • Adjunct Members
    • Affiliate Members
    • Research Associates
    • Research Lab staff
    • Emeriti
    • Alumni
    • Awards
  • Research
    • Facilities
    • Affiliated Research Centres
    • Graduate Theses
  • Undergraduate Program
    • Undergraduate Research Opportunities
    • Biology Program
    • UBC Sciences – Biology
  • Graduate Program
    • Current Students
    • Prospective Students
    • Funding
    • Apply to TA
    • Courses & Modules
    • Wellness Resources
    • Student Handbook & Forms
    • Zoology Graduate Student Association
    • Contact
  • Events
    • Weekly Seminars
    • Special Seminars and Events
    • CELL seminars
    • Discussion Groups
    • Calendar
    • Recorded Seminars
    • Event Archive
  • Resources
    • Workday
    • COVID-19 Safety
    • Zoology Webmail (log in)
    • Password Change (log in)
    • BRC-Zoology Room and Vehicle Bookings (log in)
    • North and East wing Biosci Room Bookings
    • Computing (ZCU)
    • Aquatics (private)
    • Finance
    • HR: Human Resources
    • Safety
    • Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Resources
    • Harassment and Discrimination complaints: steps and resources
    • Zoology Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Committee (private)
    • Major Zoology Committees (private)
    • Departmental Meeting Notes (private)
    • Zoology Policies (private)
    • Peer Review of Teaching (private)
    • Shipping & Receiving
    • Building access: keys and cards
    • Zoology Logo
    • Edit My Profile (private)
  • Log In

Breadcrumb

Home
»
About
»
News

Main Menu: Secondary

  • Department History
    • About the "Huts"
  • News
  • Departmental Announcements
    • Women in Science: Dr. Diane Srivastava
    • 2022
    • 2021
    • 2020
    • 2019
  • In Memoriam
  • Contacts and Information
  • Jobs
    • Past jobs
  • Buildings
  • Cycling
  • Parking
  • Transit
  • Walking

New publication: Louca et al. Evolution

May 17, 2022

Stilianos Louca, L. Francisco Henao-Díaz, Matt Pennell. 2022. The scaling of diversification rates with age is likely explained by sampling bias. Evolution

Abstract
Numerous phylogenetic studies reported the existence of a pervasive scaling relationship between the ages of extant eukaryotic clades and their estimated diversification rates. The causes of this age-rate-scaling (ARS), whether biological and/or artifactual, remain unresolved. Here we fit diversification models to thousands of eukaryotic time-calibrated phylogenies to explore multiple potential causes of the ARS including parameter non-identifiability, model inadequacy, biases in taxonomic practice, and an important and ubiquitous form of sampling bias — preferentially analyzing larger extant clades. We distinguish between two mechanism by which such sampling biases can cause an ARS: First, by favoring clades that happen to be unusually large merely by chance (i.e., due to the stochastic nature of the cladogenic process), thus leading to rate overestimation, and second, by favoring clades that have truly higher diversification rates. We find that, of the proposed explanations, only sampling biases are likely to contribute to the observed ARS. We develop methods for fully correcting for sampling bias mechanism 1, and find that despite these corrections a substantial ARS remains. We then confirm using simulations that preferring trees with truly higher rates (mechanism 2) likely explains this residual ARS. Since we do not have a completely unbiased sample of clades, including extinct ones, for phylogenetic analyses, it is difficult to demonstrate unambiguously that sampling biases are the sole cause of the ARS. Sampling biases are, however, a parsimonious and plausible explanation for this widely observed macroevolutionary pattern, and this has implications for how we interpret the distribution of diversification rate estimates in extant clades.

Department of Zoology
4200 - 6270 University Blvd.
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z4
604 822 2131
E-mail info@zoology.ubc.ca
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • UBC Copyright |
  • Accessibility