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Page 1: Temporal Sequences

Temporal Sequences

Maggie Koopman and Erik Hoffmann

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Time is on my side

Now!

First hard parts

First multicellular

First eukaryotes

First life!

The beginning!

1.5 billion years

1.0

2.0

3.0

4.0

0.0

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The Outcrop

Sometimes you have a lot to work with...

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The Outcrop

...and sometimes you don’t!

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The Outcrop

Dooley et al., 2004

No crystalline rocks

• No absolute dating • Imprecise age calibration

2 meters = 10 yrs or 10 million?

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The Outcrop

Dooley et al., 2004

Unconformities

• Stratigraphic gaps caused by non-deposition or erosion

• The bigger the time window, the bigger and more frequent the gaps will be

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The Outcrop

Dooley et al., 2004

Cover

• Prevents examination• vegetation• loose sediment/soil• snow/ice/permafrost

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The (so-so) Outcrop

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Modified from Tibert et al., 2003.

100 km

2.5 M

aConstant Motion

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No Outcrop!

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• Resolution depends on depositional rates– High rates allow high resolution– Low rates allow low resolution– Negative rates erase the record

• Not all environments are created equal!

Schindel, 1982

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Dooley et al., 2004

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Gingerich, 1983

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Limitations• Preservable hard parts only!

• Morphological change only!

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Limitations cont. • Can’t detect fine changes.• Small directional changes followed by

reversals show up as variability within the population

Geary et al., 2002

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• Long periods (relative to species durations) of morphological stasis coupled with brief periods of very rapid morphological change

• Stasis does NOT mean nothing is happening• Changes in soft parts

• Changes in tolerances/behaviors

• Small directional morphological change followed by doubling back

Punctuated Equilibrium

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• Lineage (size, hard parts, frequency)

• Location (range, availability)

• Temporal resolution ((sub)stage level)

• Character sets

• Usefulness/Interest

Biases

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Does the fossil record need to be complete?

Can we work around the gaps?

Can we derive viable sequences from a spotty record?

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Quality of the fossil record through time

M. J. Benton, M. A. Wills and R. Hitchin

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• Offers evidence that the fossil record provides uniformly good documentation of past life.

What does this paper do?

• Assesses the congruence between stratigraphy and phylogeny.

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• Valid techniques for comparing large samples of cladograms to try to estimate variations in congruence between the fossil record for different groups of organisms and for different habitats

• RCI (relative completeness index)

• GER (gap ratio index)

• SCI (stratigraphic consistency index)

The Congruence Metrics

Depend on branching point estimates and calc. Of ghost ranges

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Stratigraphic consistency index(Huelsenbeck 1994)

• Fit of the record to the tree= proportion of the nodes that are stratigraphically consistent.

•Significance of the fit= generate a null distribution for SCI under the hyp. That the statigraphic fit is not better than expected at random.

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Figure 2

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• Hypothesis 1: congruence is better than random (bars to the left)

• Alternative hypothesis: congruence is worse than expected from a random model: direct conflict between data (bars to the right)

Fig 1 a/b Benton et al 1999

RCI SCI

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What causes poor matching of age and clade data? Bias in the metric

• Difference in quality of trees

• Difference in quality of fossil record

• Stratigraphic problems

• Taxonomy

• Sampling density

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Molecular Clock Divergence Estimates and the Fossil Record of Cetartiodactyla

Jessica M. TheodorJ. Paleontology 78 (1), 2004, p 39-44

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Why this paper?

• Ties molecular clocks to the fossil record

• Introduces cetaceans and hippopotamids

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Molecular Clocks vs. the Fossil Record• Artiodactyla/Cetacea split – 60 Ma

– Earliest fossil whales 53.5 Ma

– Earliest fossil artiodactyls 55 Ma

• Odontocete/Mysticete split – 34-35 Ma– Rare at 34 Ma, good record ~30 Ma

• Hippopotamid/Cetacean split– Earliest fossil whales 53.5 Ma

– Earliest fossil hippos 15.6-15.8 Ma

» Anthracotheres - ~43 Ma

• New study using one mitochondrial and one nuclear gene sequence

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Boisserie et al., 2005

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Take home messages

• The fossil record is necessary to calibrate molecular clocks (and refute the bad ones)

• The fossil record fills gaps in phylogenetic trees, allowing us to confirm evolutionary sequences

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ReferencesBenton, M.J., M.A. Wills, and R. Hitchin 2000, Nature. 403, 534-537Benton, M.J. 2001, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B. 268, 2123-2130Boisserie, J.-R., F. Lihoreau, and M. Brunet 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 102

(5), 1537-1541Dooley Jr., A.C., N.C. Fraser, and Z.-X. Luo 2004, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 24 (2), 453-463Geary, D.H., A.W. Staley, P. Muller, and I. Magyar 2002, Paleobiology. 28 (2), 208-221Gingerich, P.D. 1983, Science. 222, 159-161Gingerich, P.D. 1984, Science. 226, 995-996Gingerich, P.D. 2002, Cetacean EvolutionGould, S.J. 1984, Science. 226, 994-995Huelsenbeck, J.P. 1994, Paleobiology. 20 (4), 470-483Koch, C.F. 1978, Paleobiology. 4 (3), 367-372Levinton, J., L. Dubb, and G.A. Wray 2004, Journal of Paleontology. 78 (1), 31-38Lihoreau, F., and J.-R. Boisserie 2004, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 24 (Supp. 3), 83ARose, K. 2001, Science. 293, 2216-2217Schindel, D. 1982, Paleobiology. 8 (4), 340-353Schopf, T.J.M. 1982, Evolution. 36 (6), 1144-1157Theodor, J.M. 2004, Journal of Paleontology. 78 (1), 39-44Tibert, N.E., R.M. Leckie, J.G. Eaton, J.I. Kirkland, J.-P Colin, E.L. Leithold, and M.E. McCormick

2003, in Olson, H.C. and R.M. Leckie, eds., Micropaleontologic Proxies for Sea-Level Change and Stratigraphic Discontinuities: SEPM Special Publication No. 75, 263-299

Wills, M.A. 1999, Systematic Biology. 48 (3), 559-58


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