Published April 5, 2016 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Assessment of available anatomical characters for linking living mammals to fossil taxa in phylogenetic analyses

  • 1. Imperial College London
  • 2. Natural History Museum

Description

Analyses of living and fossil taxa are crucial for understanding biodiversity through time. The total evidence method allows living and fossil taxa to be combined in phylogenies, using molecular data for living taxa and morphological data for living and fossil taxa. With this method, substantial overlap of coded anatomical characters among living and fossil taxa is vital for accurately inferring topology. However, although molecular data for living species are widely available, scientists generating morphological data mainly focus on fossils. Therefore, there are fewer coded anatomical characters in living taxa, even in well-studied groups such as mammals. We investigated the number of coded anatomical characters available in phylogenetic matrices for living mammals and how these were phylogenetically distributed across orders. Eleven of 28 mammalian orders have less than 25% species with available characters; this has implications for the accurate placement of fossils, although the issue is less pronounced at higher taxonomic levels. In most orders, species with available characters are randomly distributed across the phylogeny, which may reduce the impact of the problem. We suggest that increased morphological data collection efforts for living taxa are needed to produce accurate total evidence phylogenies.

Notes

Files

Matrices.zip

Files (1.4 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:ecec967810f975fbe2268061f4c2c554
1.4 MB Preview Download
md5:3dfed93040803b09916c4c5768e468cb
369 Bytes Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1098/rsbl.2015.1003 (DOI)