Data from: Early bursts of body size and shape evolution are rare in comparative data

Luke J. Harmon, Jonathan B. Losos, T. Jonathan Davies, Rosemary G. Gillespie, John L. Gittleman, W. Bryan Jennings, Kenneth H. Kozak, Mark A. McPeek, Franck Moreno-Roark, Thomas J. Near, Andy Purvis, Robert E. Ricklefs, Dolph Schluter, , Ole Seehausen, Brian L. Sidlauskas, Omar Torres-Carvajal, Jason T. Weir & Arne Ø. Mooers
George Gaylord Simpson famously postulated that much of life's diversity originated as adaptive radiations—more or less simultaneous divergences of numerous lines from a single ancestral adaptive type. However, identifying adaptive radiations has proven difficult due to a lack of broad-scale comparative datasets. Here, we use phylogenetic comparative data on body size and shape in a diversity of animal clades to test a key model of adaptive radiation, in which initially rapid morphological evolution is followed...

Registration Year

  • 2013
    1

Resource Types

  • Dataset
    1

Affiliations

  • National Evolutionary Synthesis Center
    1
  • University of Georgia
    1
  • National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
    1
  • University of Minnesota
    1
  • University of California, Berkeley
    1
  • Simon Fraser University
    1
  • University of Bern
    1
  • Humboldt State University
    1
  • Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador
    1
  • University of Missouri–St. Louis
    1