2018
DOI: 10.1111/jzo.12629
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The imprints left by historical contingency on marsupials' life‐history traits

Abstract: Historical contingency may lead to distinct evolutionary imprints in early‐isolated taxonomic groups. Here, we used comparative phylogenetics to unravel biogeographical imprints left by distinct historical contingencies on the evolutionary patterns of life‐history traits of an iconic group, currently separated by ocean‐wide distance: the marsupials. Australasian and New World marsupial communities share a common ancestry but were subjected to different biogeographic histories: while the Australasian community … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The early-burst model was not supported for either height or fruit size for the volcanic island palm clades (hypothesis 3). An early-burst pattern in species traits evolution actually appears to be empirically rare across the Tree of Life 11 , 39 , 40 . Extinction tends to erase signals from the molecular phylogenies, which can obscure the signal of early, rapid diversification followed by slows down in phylogenies 41 , 42 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The early-burst model was not supported for either height or fruit size for the volcanic island palm clades (hypothesis 3). An early-burst pattern in species traits evolution actually appears to be empirically rare across the Tree of Life 11 , 39 , 40 . Extinction tends to erase signals from the molecular phylogenies, which can obscure the signal of early, rapid diversification followed by slows down in phylogenies 41 , 42 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because there is a bias towards the study of common species, we urge colleagues to document the diversity of metazoan parasites associated with all didelphimorph marsupials. The greatest species diversity of didelphimorph marsupials includes small sized opossums, most of which are arboreal or are restricted to small areas in the tropical forests [4,6]. We urge the examination of preserved mammalian guts available in scientific collections to continue reconstructing the biological inventory of their symbionts, which includes parasites.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%