Data from: A phylogenetic analysis of macroevolutionary patterns in fermentative yeasts
When novel sources of ecological opportunity are available, physiological innovations can trigger adaptive radiations. This could be the case of yeasts (Saccharomycotina), in which an evolutionary novelty is represented by the capacity to exploit simple sugars from fruits (fermentation). During adap...
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Zusammenfassung: | When novel sources of ecological opportunity are available, physiological
innovations can trigger adaptive radiations. This could be the case of
yeasts (Saccharomycotina), in which an evolutionary novelty is represented
by the capacity to exploit simple sugars from fruits (fermentation).
During adaptive radiations, diversification and morphological evolution
are predicted to slow-down after early bursts of diversification. Here, we
performed the first comparative phylogenetic analysis in yeasts, testing
the “early burst” prediction on species diversification and also on traits
of putative ecological relevance (cell-size and fermentation versatility).
We found that speciation rates are constant during the time-range we
considered (ca., 150 millions of years). Phylogenetic signal of both
traits was significant (but lower for cell-size), suggesting that lineages
resemble each other in trait-values. Disparity analysis suggested
accelerated evolution (diversification in trait values above Brownian
Motion expectations) in cell-size. We also found a significant
phylogenetic regression between cell-size and fermentation versatility (R2
= 0.10), which suggests correlated evolution between both traits. Overall,
our results do not support the early burst prediction both in species and
traits, but suggest a number of interesting evolutionary patterns, that
warrant further exploration. For instance, we show that the Whole Genomic
Duplication that affected a whole clade of yeasts, does not seems to have
a statistically detectable phenotypic effect at our level of analysis. In
this regard, further studies of fermentation under common-garden
conditions combined with comparative analyses are warranted. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.2hf06 |