Abstract

What an animal eats is a fundamental aspect of its biology, but the evolution of diet has not been studied across animal phylogeny. Here, we performed a large‐scale phylogenetic analysis to address three unresolved questions about the evolution of animal diets. (i) Are diets conserved across animal phylogeny? (ii) Does diet influence rates of species proliferation (diversification) among animal phyla? (iii) What was the ancestral diet of animals and major animal clades? We analyzed diet data for 1087 taxa, proportionally sampled among animal phyla based on the relative species richness of phyla. Our survey suggests that across animals, carnivory is most common (∼63%), herbivory less common (∼32%), and omnivory relatively rare (∼3%). Despite considerable controversy over whether ecological traits are conserved or labile, we found strong conservatism in diet over extraordinarily deep timescales. We found that diet is unrelated to rates of species diversification across animal phyla, contrasting with previous studies showing that herbivory increased diversification within some important groups (e.g., crustaceans, insects, and mammals). Finally, we estimated that the ancestor of all animals was most likely carnivorous, as were many major phyla (e.g., arthropods, molluscs, and chordates). Remarkably, our results suggest that many carnivorous species living today may have maintained this diet through a continuous series of carnivorous ancestors for >800 million years.

Highlights

  • What an animal eats is a fundamental aspect of its biology, but the evolution of diet has not been studied across animal phylogeny

  • We performed a large-scale phylogenetic analysis to address three unresolved questions about the evolution of animal diets. (i) Are diets conserved across animal phylogeny? (ii) Does diet influence rates of species proliferation among animal phyla? (iii) What was the ancestral diet of animals and major animal clades? We analyzed diet data for 1087 taxa, proportionally sampled among animal phyla based on the relative species richness of phyla

  • We present the first large-scale analysis of the evolution of animal diet

Read more

Summary

Introduction

What an animal eats is a fundamental aspect of its biology, but the evolution of diet has not been studied across animal phylogeny. Previous studies suggested that diet (especially a herbivorous, plant-eating diet) drives rates of species proliferation and diversity patterns in major groups of animals (e.g., mammals, insects, and crustaceans). This has not been tested across animal phyla. Previous large-scale studies have suggested that food webs in natural systems are shaped (in part) by phylogenetic constraints on diet (Cattin et al 2014) and that ecological interactions among species (e.g., predator–prey) are broadly conserved across the tree of life (Gomez et al 2010) These important studies did not directly address the evolution and conservatism of trophic strategies at deep phylogenetic scales

Methods
Results
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.