Data from: Data sources for trait databases: comparing the phenomic content of monographs and evolutionary matrices
Databases of organismal traits that aggregate information from one or multiple sources can be leveraged for large-scale analyses in biology. Yet the differences among these data streams and how well they capture trait diversity have never been explored. We present the first analysis of the differenc...
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Zusammenfassung: | Databases of organismal traits that aggregate information from one or
multiple sources can be leveraged for large-scale analyses in biology. Yet
the differences among these data streams and how well they capture trait
diversity have never been explored. We present the first analysis of the
differences between phenotypes captured in free text of descriptive
publications (‘monographs’) and those used in phylogenetic analyses
(‘matrices’). We focus our analysis on osteological phenotypes of the
limbs of four extinct vertebrate taxa critical to our understanding of the
fin-to-limb transition. We find that there is low overlap between the
anatomical entities used in these two sources of phenotype data,
indicating that phenotypes represented in matrices are not simply a subset
of those found in monographic descriptions. Perhaps as expected, compared
to characters found in matrices, phenotypes in monographs tend to
emphasize descriptive and positional morphology, be somewhat more complex,
and relate to fewer additional taxa. While based on a small set of focal
taxa, these qualitative and quantitative data suggest that either source
of phenotypes alone will result in incomplete knowledge of variation for a
given taxon. As a broader community develops to use and expand databases
characterizing organismal trait diversity, it is important to recognize
the limitations of the data sources and develop strategies to more fully
characterize variation both within species and across the tree of life. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.dc8nn |