Quantifying rates of morphological evolution is important in many macroevolutionary studies, and critical when assessing possible adaptive radiations and episodes of punctuated equilibrium in the fossil record. However, studies of morphological rates of change have lagged behind those on taxonomic diversification, and most authors have focused on continuous characters and quantifying patterns of morphological rates over time. Here, we provide a phylogenetic approach, using discrete characters and three statistical tests to determine points on a cladogram (branches or entire clades) that are characterized by significantly high or low rates of change. These methods include a randomization and likelihood ratio tests that pinpoint either branch...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
When building the tree of life, variability of phylogenetic signal is often accounted for by partiti...
Quantifying rates of morphological evolution is important in many macroevolutionary studies, and cri...
Quantifying rates of morphological evolution is important in many macroevolutionary studies, and cri...
Quantifying rates of morphological evolution is important in many macroevolutionary studies, and cri...
This study develops the random phylogenies rate test (RAPRATE), a likelihood method that simulates m...
Likelihood-based methods are commonplace in phylogenetic systematics. Although much effort has been ...
1.Quantifying phenotypic evolutionary rates and their variation across phylogenetic trees is a major...
The fossil record provides an important source of data on adaptive radiations, and indeed some of th...
* Quantifying phenotypic evolutionary rates and their variation across phylogenetic trees is a major...
Many questions in evolutionary biology require the quantification and comparison of rates of phenoty...
Rates of trait evolution are known to vary across phylogenies; however, standard evolutionary models...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
When building the tree of life, variability of phylogenetic signal is often accounted for by partiti...
Quantifying rates of morphological evolution is important in many macroevolutionary studies, and cri...
Quantifying rates of morphological evolution is important in many macroevolutionary studies, and cri...
Quantifying rates of morphological evolution is important in many macroevolutionary studies, and cri...
This study develops the random phylogenies rate test (RAPRATE), a likelihood method that simulates m...
Likelihood-based methods are commonplace in phylogenetic systematics. Although much effort has been ...
1.Quantifying phenotypic evolutionary rates and their variation across phylogenetic trees is a major...
The fossil record provides an important source of data on adaptive radiations, and indeed some of th...
* Quantifying phenotypic evolutionary rates and their variation across phylogenetic trees is a major...
Many questions in evolutionary biology require the quantification and comparison of rates of phenoty...
Rates of trait evolution are known to vary across phylogenies; however, standard evolutionary models...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
When building the tree of life, variability of phylogenetic signal is often accounted for by partiti...