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A PHYLOGENETIC TEST FOR ADAPTIVE CONVERGENCE IN ROCK‐DWELLING LIZARDS
Author(s) -
Revell Liam J.,
Johnson Michele A.,
Schulte James A.,
Kolbe Jason J.,
Losos Jonathan B.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.84
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1558-5646
pISSN - 0014-3820
DOI - 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00225.x
Subject(s) - biology , convergent evolution , exaptation , lizard , clade , anolis , adaptation (eye) , phylogenetic tree , ecology , parallel evolution , habitat , phylogenetics , evolutionary biology , biochemistry , neuroscience , gene
Phenotypic similarity of species occupying similar habitats has long been taken as strong evidence of adaptation, but this approach implicitly assumes that similarity is evolutionarily derived. However, even derived similarities may not represent convergent adaptation if the similarities did not evolve as a result of the same selection pressures; an alternative possibility is that the similar features evolved for different reasons, but subsequently allowed the species to occupy the same habitat, in which case the convergent evolution of the same feature by species occupying similar habitats would be the result of exaptation. Many lizard lineages have evolved to occupy vertical rock surfaces, a habitat that places strong functional and ecological demands on lizards. We examined four clades in which species that use vertical rock surfaces exhibit long hindlimbs and flattened bodies. Morphological change on the phylogenetic branches leading to the rock‐dwelling species in the four clades differed from change on other branches of the phylogeny; evolutionary transitions to rock‐dwelling generally were associated with increases in limb length and decreases in head depth. Examination of particular characters revealed several different patterns of evolutionary change. Rock‐dwelling lizards exhibited similarities in head depth as a result of both adaptation and exaptation. Moreover, even though rock‐dwelling species generally had longer limbs than their close relatives, clade‐level differences in limb length led to an overall lack of difference between rock‐ and non–rock‐dwelling lizards. These results indicate that evolutionary change in the same direction in independent lineages does not necessarily produce convergence, and that the existence of similar advantageous structures among species independently occupying the same environment may not indicate adaptation.