En la carrera de la evolución
¿Quienes son los vencedores y quienes los perdedores?
En UCLA, el profesor Michael Alfaro ha publicado un estudio de investigación muy interesante y especialmente curioso
Naming evolution's winners and losers
Mammals, birds show rich species diversity; alligators not so much
Mammals and many species of birds and fish are among
evolution's "winners," while crocodiles, alligators and a reptile cousin
of snakes and lizards known as the tuatara are among the losers,
according to new research by UCLA scientists and colleagues.
"Our results indicate that mammals are special," said Michael
Alfaro, a UCLA assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology
and lead author of the research.
The study, published July 24 in the early online edition of
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, also shows that new
species emerge nearly as often as they die off.
Alfaro and his colleagues analyzed DNA sequences and fossils from
47 major vertebrate groups and used a computational approach to
calculate whether the "species richness" of each group was exceptionally
high or low. The research allows scientists to calculate for the first
time which animal lineages have exceptional rates of success.
Among the evolutionary winners are most modern birds, including the
songbirds, parrots, doves, eagles, hummingbirds and pigeons; a group
that includes most mammals; and a group of fish that includes most of
the fish that live on coral reefs, said Alfaro, an evolutionary
biologist.
A group with the scientific name Boreoeutheria, which
consists of many mammals, has diversified about seven times faster than
scientists would have expected, beginning about 110 million years ago,
Alfaro and his colleagues calculated. The group includes primates and
carnivores, as well as bats and rodents. Pouched mammals, such as
kangaroos, are not as richly varied as other mammals, Alfaro said.
Modern birds have diversified about nine times faster than
expected, starting about 103 million years ago, and the group of fish
that live on coral reefs has diversified about eight times faster than
expected, he said.
Who are the evolutionary losers?
Crocodiles and alligators are nearly 250 million years old yet have
diversified into only 23 species, Alfaro said. They are diversifying a
staggering 1,000 times slower than would have been expected. "Their
species richness is so low, given how old they are," he said.
The tuatara, which lives in New Zealand and resembles lizards —
although it is actually a distant cousin — has only two species. "In the
same period of time that produced more than 8,000 species of snakes and
lizards, there were only two species of tuatara," Alfaro said.
Why are there not thousands of species of tuataras?
"That is one of the big mysteries about biodiversity," Alfaro said.
"Why these evolutionary losers are still around is a very hard thing to
explain. They have been drawing inside straights for hundreds of
millions of years. It's a real mystery to biologists how there can be
any tuataras, given their low rate of speciation. They must have
something working for them that has allowed them to persist. In species
richness, these are losers, but in another sense, this highlights how
unique they are. There are incredibly disparate patterns of species
richness."
Tuataras were a bit more diverse in their heyday; there may have
been a few dozen species of them, most of which have become extinct,
Alfaro said.
In contrast, there are more than 9,000 bird species, more than
5,400 mammal species, approximately 5,500 frog species, some 3,000 snake
species and 5,200 lizard species, Alfaro said.
The number of frog species, although it sounds high, is about what
Alfaro would expect, given how old they are — approximately 250 million
years old.
"Our analysis suggests we should not be surprised to see a group with that many species in that amount of time," Alfaro said.
There are almost 60,000 species of jawed vertebrates. Alfaro and
his colleagues report evidence for exceptional diversification rates in
nine taxonomic groups of jawed vertebrates. Interestingly, their
findings do not coincide with traditional scientific explanations for
why there are so many mammals, birds and fish.
"The timing of the rate increases does not correspond to the
appearance of key characteristics that have been invoked to explain the
evolutionary success of these groups, such as hair on mammals or
mammals' well-coordinated chewing ability or feathers on birds," Alfaro
said. "Our results suggest that something more recent is the cause of
the biodiversity. It may be that something more subtle explains the
evolutionary success of mammals, birds and fish. We need to look for new
explanations."
Co-authors on the PNAS paper are Luke Harmon, a professor of
biological sciences at the University of Idaho; Francesco Santini, a
UCLA postdoctoral scholar in Alfaro's laboratory; Chad Brock, a graduate
student of biology at Washington State University; Hugo Alamillo, a
graduate student of biology at Washington State University; Alex
Dornburg, a former undergraduate in Alfaro's laboratory, now a graduate
student at Yale University; Daniel Rabosky, a graduate student of
biology at Cornell University; and Giorgio Carnevale, a postdoctoral
scholar at Italy's University of Pisa.
The research is federally funded by the National Science Foundation.
Alfaro's laboratory also studies why some groups of animals have
great diversity in their shapes and others do not, even if there are
many species. He and his colleagues use DNA sequencing to tease apart
evolutionary relationships, analyze the fossil record and conduct
sophisticated statistical analysis.
"We are interested in understanding the causes of
biodiversity," Alfaro said. "We are trying to understand what explains
the staggering diversity of reef fishes and other vertebrates."
"Our analysis can highlight how much higher extinction rates are in the present, compared with the historical rates," he said.
For more about Alfaro's research, visit his website at http://pandorasboxfish.squarespace.com.

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