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Sources of error and confidence intervals in estimating the age of angiosperms from rbcL and 18S rDNA data
Author(s) -
Sanderson Michael J.,
Doyle James A.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.2307/3558458
Subject(s) - molecular clock , biology , range (aeronautics) , cretaceous , phylogenetic tree , lineage (genetic) , confidence interval , taxon , paleontology , evolutionary biology , ecology , statistics , genetics , materials science , mathematics , gene , composite material
Molecular estimates of the age of angiosperms have varied widely, and many greatly predate the Early Cretaceous appearance of angiosperms in the fossil record, but there have been few attempts to assess confidence limits on ages. Experiments with rbcL and 18S data using maximum likelihood suggest that previous angiosperm age estimates were too old because they assumed equal rates across sites—use of a gamma distribution of rates to correct for site‐to‐site variation gives 10–30 my (million years) younger ages—and relied on herbaceous angiosperm taxa with high rates of molecular evolution. Ages based on first and second codon positions of rbcL are markedly older than those based on third positions, which conflict with the fossil record in being too young, but all examined data partitions of rbcL and 18S depart substantially from a molecular clock. Age estimates are surprisingly insensitive to different views on seed‐plant relationships. Randomization schemes were used to quantify confidence intervals due to phylogenetic uncertainty, substitutional noise, and lineage effects (deviations from a molecular clock). Estimates of the age of crown‐group angiosperms range from 68 to 281 mya (million years ago), depending on data, tree, and assumptions, with most ∼140–190 mya (Early Jurassic–earliest Cretaceous). Approximate 95% confidence intervals on ages are wider for rbcL than 18S, ranging up to 160 my for phylogenetic uncertainty, 90 my for substitutional noise, and 70 my for lineage effects. These intervals overlap the oldest occurrences of angiosperms in the fossil record, as well as some estimates from previous molecular studies.

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