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A common tendency for phylogenetic overdispersion in mammalian assemblages.


ABSTRACT: Competition has long been proposed as an important force in structuring mammalian communities. Although early work recognized that competition has a phylogenetic dimension, only with recent increases in the availability of phylogenies have true phylogenetic investigations of mammalian community structure become possible. We test whether the phylogenetic structure of 142 assemblages from three mammalian clades (New World monkeys, North American ground squirrels and Australasian possums) shows the imprint of competition. The full set of assemblages display a highly significant tendency for members to be more distantly related than expected by chance (phylogenetic overdispersion). The overdispersion is also significant within two of the clades (monkeys and squirrels) separately. This is the first demonstration of widespread overdispersion in mammal assemblages and implies an important role for either competition between close relatives where traits are conserved, habitat filtering where distant relatives share convergent traits, or both.

SUBMITTER: Cooper N 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2596359 | biostudies-literature | 2008 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A common tendency for phylogenetic overdispersion in mammalian assemblages.

Cooper Natalie N   Rodríguez Jesús J   Purvis Andy A  

Proceedings. Biological sciences 20080901 1646


Competition has long been proposed as an important force in structuring mammalian communities. Although early work recognized that competition has a phylogenetic dimension, only with recent increases in the availability of phylogenies have true phylogenetic investigations of mammalian community structure become possible. We test whether the phylogenetic structure of 142 assemblages from three mammalian clades (New World monkeys, North American ground squirrels and Australasian possums) shows the  ...[more]

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