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The soft explosive model of placental mammal evolution

View ORCID ProfileMatthew J Phillips, View ORCID ProfileCarmelo Fruciano
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/251520
Matthew J Phillips
1School of Earth, Environmental and Biological Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
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  • For correspondence: m9.phillips@qut.edu.au
Carmelo Fruciano
1School of Earth, Environmental and Biological Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
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Abstract

Recent molecular dating estimates for placental mammals echo fossil inferences for an explosive interordinal diversification, but typically place this event some 10-20 million years earlier than the Paleocene fossils, among apparently more “primitive” mammal faunas. However, current models of molecular evolution do not adequately account for parallel rate changes, and result in dramatic divergence underestimates for large, long-lived mammals such as whales and hominids. Calibrating among these taxa shifts the rate model errors deeper in the tree, inflating interordinal divergence estimates. We employ simulations based on empirical rate variation, which show that this “error-shift inflation” can explain previous molecular dating overestimates relative to fossil inferences. Molecular dating accuracy is substantially improved in the simulations by focusing on calibrations for taxa that retain plesiomorphic life-history characteristics. Applying this strategy to the empirical data favours the soft explosive model of placental evolution, in line with traditional palaeontological interpretations – a few Cretaceous placental lineages give rise to a rapid interordinal diversification following the 66 Ma Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary mass extinction. Our soft explosive model for the diversification of placental mammals brings into agreement previously incongruous molecular, fossil, and ancestral life history estimates, and closely aligns with a growing consensus for a similar model for bird evolution. We show that recent criticism of the soft explosive model relies on ignoring both experimental controls and statistical confidence, as well as misrepresentation, and inconsistent interpretations of morphological phylogeny. More generally, we suggest that the evolutionary properties of adaptive radiations may leave current molecular dating methods susceptible to overestimating the timing of major diversification events.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted January 22, 2018.
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The soft explosive model of placental mammal evolution
Matthew J Phillips, Carmelo Fruciano
bioRxiv 251520; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/251520
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The soft explosive model of placental mammal evolution
Matthew J Phillips, Carmelo Fruciano
bioRxiv 251520; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/251520

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