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Using Integrative Biology to Infer Adaptation from Comparisons of Two (or a Few) Species
Author(s) -
Christian L. Cox,
Michael L. Logan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
physiological and biochemical zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.957
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1537-5293
pISSN - 1522-2152
DOI - 10.1086/714018
Subject(s) - biology , adaptation (eye) , phylogenetic comparative methods , phylogenetic tree , comparative biology , trait , statistical inference , inference , evolutionary biology , underdetermination , phylogenetics , selection (genetic algorithm) , comparative method , statistical hypothesis testing , ecology , computer science , machine learning , artificial intelligence , statistics , epistemology , genetics , gene , philosophy , linguistics , mathematics , neuroscience , philosophy of science , programming language
AbstractPhylogenetic comparative methods represent a major advance in integrative and comparative biology and have allowed researchers to rigorously test for adaptation in a macroevolutionary framework. However, phylogenetic comparative methods require trait data for many species, which is impractical for certain taxonomic groups and trait types. We propose that the philosophical principle of severity can be implemented in an integrative framework to generate strong inference of adaptation in studies that compare only a few populations or species. This approach requires (1) ensuring that the study system contains species that are relatively closely related; (2) formulating a specific, clear, overarching hypothesis that can be subjected to integrative testing across levels of biological organization (e.g., ecology, behavior, morphology, physiology, and genetics); (3) collecting data that avoid statistical underdetermination and thus allow severe tests of hypotheses; and (4) systematically refining and refuting alternative hypotheses. Although difficult to collect for more than a few species, detailed, integrative data can be used to differentiate among several potential agents of selection. In this way, integrative studies of small numbers of closely related species can complement and even improve on broadscale phylogenetic comparative studies by revealing the specific drivers of adaptation.

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