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Research Seminar - October 23, 1998
Seminar Announcement
| Title: |
Simulating reconstruction of species lineages
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| Speaker: |
Ken Wessen |
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Anatomy and Human Biology |
| Date: |
Friday 23rd October, 1998 |
| Time: |
3pm |
| Venue: |
Seminar Room 1.24 |
Abstract
In this study, the evolution of species is modelled by starting with a
single ancestral species with a particular suite of morphological
"characters", that is then evolved in discrete steps. The characters are
of two distinct types - hereditary characters that are passed on from the
parent species (apart from the effects of random mutations), and
functionally adaptive characters (produced during ontogeny by interaction
with the home environment of each species). At each step, a small number
of these characters may change. Random extinction, migration, and
fossilisation are also included.
Living and fossil forms alone are then used to reconstruct a phylogeny and
migration history, and the results compared against the known true
phylogeny from the simulation. Two techniques of reconstruction are
employed. The first technique involves matching existing species and
fossils to the most closely (morphologically) related earlier fossil. The
other involves a phylogenetic reconstruction based on the discrete
morphological characters of the existing species only.
Initial results show that, even at artificially high fossilisation
rates, the number of fossils leading to living species is rather
small - most fossils being on extinct lines, and the most recent
common ancestor is close to the stem of the model, and is usually not
a fossil. This contrasts with the reconstructions, where most
fossils seem to lead to living species, and the most recent common
ancestor is usually a very recent fossil.
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