Evolutionary Diversification of Clades of Squamate Reptiles

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Evolutionary Diversification of Clades of Squamate Reptiles

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dc.contributor.author Ricklefs, Robert E.
dc.contributor.author Losos, Jonathan
dc.contributor.author Townsend, Ted M.
dc.date.accessioned 2009-04-03T14:18:30Z
dc.date.issued 2007
dc.identifier.citation Ricklefs, Robert E., Jonathan B. Losos, and Ted M. Townsend. 2007. Evolutionary diversification of clades of squamate reptiles. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 20(5): 1751-1762. en
dc.identifier.issn 1010-061X en
dc.identifier.uri http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:2766652
dc.description.abstract We analysed the diversification of squamate reptiles (7488 species) based on a new molecular phylogeny, and compared the results to similar estimates for passerine birds (5712 species). The number of species in each of 36 squamate lineages showed no evidence of phylogenetic conservatism. Compared with a random speciation-extinction process with parameters estimated from the size distribution of clades, the alethinophidian snakes (2600 species) were larger than expected and 13 clades, each having fewer than 20 species, were smaller than expected, indicating rate heterogeneity. From a lineage-through-time plot, we estimated that a provisional rate of lineage extinction (0.66 per Myr) was 94% of the rate of lineage splitting (0.70 per Myr). Diversification in squamate lineages was independent of their stem age, but strongly related to the area of the region within which they occur. Tropical vs. temperate latitude exerted a marginally significant influence on species richness. In comparison with passerine birds, squamates share several clade features, including: (1) independence of species richness and age; (2) lack of phylogenetic signal with respect to clade size; (3) general absence of exceptionally large clades; (4) over-representation of small clades; (5) influence of region size on clade size; and (6) similar rates of speciation and extinction. The evidence for both groups suggests that clade size has achieved long-term equilibrium, suggesting negative feedback of species richness on the rate of diversification. en
dc.description.sponsorship Organismic and Evolutionary Biology en
dc.language.iso en_US en
dc.publisher Blackwell Publishing en
dc.relation.isversionof http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2007.01388.x en
dash.license META_ONLY
dc.subject extinction en
dc.subject lineage-through-time plot en
dc.subject alethinophidian snakes en
dc.subject speciation en
dc.subject mass extinction en
dc.subject key innovation en
dc.subject squamate reptiles en
dc.subject phylogenetic independence en
dc.subject passerine birds en
dc.title Evolutionary Diversification of Clades of Squamate Reptiles en
dc.relation.journal Journal of Evolutionary Biology en
dash.depositing.author Losos, Jonathan
dash.embargo.until 10000-01-01

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  • FAS Scholarly Articles [5128]
    Peer reviewed scholarly articles from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences of Harvard University

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