A priori and a posteriori methods in comparative evolutionary studies of host-parasite associations

被引:12
作者
Dowling, APG
van Veller, MGP
Hoberg, EP
Brooks, DR
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Museum Zool, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[2] Univ Wageningen & Res Ctr, Biosyst Grp, NL-6703 BL Wageningen, Netherlands
[3] ARS, US Natl Parasite Collect & Parasite Biol, Epidemiol & Systemat Lab, USDA, Beltsville, MD 20705 USA
[4] Univ Toronto, Dept Zool, Toronto, ON M5S 3G5, Canada
关键词
coevolution; A priori methods; A posteriori methods; Brooks parsimony analysis; reconciled tree analysis; TreeMap; parsimony; logical consistency; phylogenetic systematics; null hypothesis; total evidence; induction; deduction; falsification; verification; host-parasite associations;
D O I
10.1016/S0748-3007(03)00048-3
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Brooks parsimony analysis (BPA) and reconciliation methods in studies of host-parasite associations differ fundamentally, despite using the same null hypothesis. Reconciliation methods may eliminate or modify input data to maximize fit of single parasite clades to a null hypothesis of cospeciation, by invoking different a priori assumptions, including a known host phylogeny. By examining the degree of phylogenetic congruence among multiple parasite clades, using hosts as analogs of taxa but not presuming a host phylogeny or any degree of cospeciation a priori, BPA modifies the null hypothesis of cospeciation if necessary to maintain the integrity of the input data. Two exemplars illustrate critical empirical differences between reconciliation methods and BPA: (1) reconciliation methods rather than BPA may select the incorrect general host cladogram for a set of data from different clades of parasites, (2) BPA rather than reconciliation methods provides the most parsimonious interpretation of all available data, and (3) secondary BPA, proposed in 1990, when applied to data sets in which host-switching produces hosts with reticulate histories, provides the most parsimonious and biologically realistic interpretations of general host cladograms. The extent to which these general host cladograms, based on cospeciation among different parasite clades inhabiting the same hosts, correspond to host phylogeny can be tested, a posteriori, by comparison with a host phylogeny generated from nonparasite data. These observations lead to the conclusion that BPA and reconciliation methods are designed to implement different research programs based on different epistemologies. BPA is an a posteriori method that is designed to assess the host context of parasite speciation events, whereas reconciliation methods are a priori methods that are designed to fit parasite phylogenies to a host phylogeny. Host-switching events are essential for explaining complex histories of host-parasite associations. BPA assumes coevolutionary complexity (historical contingency), relying on parsimony as an a posteriori explanatory tool to summarize complex results, whereas reconciliation methods, which embody formalized assumptions of maximum cospeciation, are based on a priori conceptual parsimony. Modifications of basic reconciliation methods, embodied in TreeMap 1.0 and TreeMap 2.02, represent the addition of weighting schemes in which the researcher specifies allowed departures from cospeciation a priori, with the result that TreeMap results more closely agree with BPA results than do reconciled tree analysis results. (C) 2003 The Willi Hennig Society. Published by Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:240 / 253
页数:14
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