Abstract

Rates of trait evolution are known to vary across phylogenies; however, standard evolutionary models assume a homogeneous process of trait change. These simple methods are widely applied in small‐scale phylogenetic studies, whereas models of rate heterogeneity are not, so the prevalence and patterns of potential rate variation in groups up to hundreds of species remain unclear. The extent to which trait evolution is modelled accurately on a given phylogeny is also largely unknown because studies typically lack absolute model fit tests. We investigated these issues by applying both rate‐static and variable‐rates methods on (i) body mass data for 88 avian clades of 10–318 species, and (ii) data simulated under a range of rate‐heterogeneity scenarios. Our results show that rate heterogeneity is present across small‐scaled avian clades, and consequently applying only standard single‐process models prompts inaccurate inferences about the generating evolutionary process. Specifically, these approaches underestimate rate variation, and systematically mislabel temporal trends in trait evolution. Conversely, variable‐rates approaches have superior relative fit (they are the best model) and absolute fit (they describe the data well). We show that rate changes such as single internal branch variations, rate decreases and early bursts are hard to detect, even by variable‐rates models. We also use recently developed absolute adequacy tests to highlight misleading conclusions based on relative fit alone (e.g. a consistent preference for constrained evolution when isolated terminal branch rate increases are present). This work highlights the potential for robust inferences about trait evolution when fitting flexible models in conjunction with tests for absolute model fit.

Highlights

  • Phenotypic diversity represents a fundamental axis of biodiversity, alongside variation in species richness

  • We further investigate in more detail when and how different forms of rate heterogeneity incapacitate evolutionary models, using simulated rate-variation scenarios informed by empirical observations

  • Several recurrent forms of rate heterogeneity stood out (Fig. 2): rate changes affecting whole clades (e.g. Paradoxornis genus, Fig. S71; Geospiza and Camarhynchus genera, Fig. S78; Cinclodes genus, Fig. S84), rate increases on isolated terminal branches (e.g. Figs S76, S81, S83) and evolutionary rate increases on an internal branch not passed to descendants

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Summary

Introduction

Phenotypic diversity represents a fundamental axis of biodiversity, alongside variation in species richness. Species diversify into a multitude of forms, and significant differences in the magnitude and disparity of phenotypic traits occur across the tree of life. The speed at which traits change (i.e. the rate of evolution) may vary in numerous ways, including between groups of species (e.g. Hawaiian honeycreepers vs Hawaiian thrushes, Lovette et al, 2002), across habitats

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