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The phylogenetic signal in tooth wear: What does it mean?

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posted on 2019-09-18, 14:04 authored by L DeSantis, M Fortelius, FE Grine, C Janis, TM Kaiser, G Merceron, MA Purnell, E Schulz-Kornas, J Saarinen, M Teaford, PS Ungar, I Žliobaitė
A new study by Fraser et al (2018) urges the use of phylogenetic comparative methods, whenever possible, in analyses of mammalian tooth wear. We are concerned about this for two reasons. First, this recommendation may mislead the research community into thinking that phylogenetic signal is an artifact of some sort rather than a fundamental outcome of the evolutionary process. Secondly, this recommendation may set a precedent for editors and reviewers to enforce phylogenetic adjustment where it may unnecessarily weaken or even directionally alter the results, shifting the emphasis of analysis from common patterns manifested by large clades to rare cases.

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Citation

Ecology and Evolution, 2018, 8 (22), pp. 11359-11362

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/School of Geography, Geology and the Environment

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Ecology and Evolution

Publisher

Wiley for European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB), Society for the Study of Evolution (SSE)

issn

2045-7758

Acceptance date

2018-08-16

Copyright date

2018

Available date

2019-09-18

Publisher version

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ece3.4541

Language

en

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