| Literature DB >> 32617191 |
Benedict King1, Martin Rücklin1.
Abstract
Tip dating, a method of phylogenetic analysis in which fossils are included as terminals and assigned an age, is becoming increasingly widely used in evolutionary studies. Current implementations of tip dating allow fossil ages to be assigned as a point estimate, or incorporate uncertainty through the use of uniform tip age priors. However, the use of tip age priors has the unwanted effect of decoupling the ages of fossils from the same fossil site. Here we introduce a new Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) proposal, which allows fossils from the same site to have linked ages, while still incorporating uncertainty in the age of the fossil site itself. We also include an extension, allowing fossil sites to be ordered in a stratigraphic column with age bounds applied only to the top and bottom of the sequence. These MCMC proposals are implemented in a new open-source BEAST2 package, palaeo. We test these new proposals on a dataset of early vertebrate fossils, concentrating on the effects on two sites with multiple acanthodian fossil taxa but wide age uncertainty, the Man On The Hill (MOTH) site from northern Canada, and the Turin Hill site from Scotland, both of Lochkovian (Early Devonian) age. The results show an increased precision of age estimates when fossils have linked tip ages compared to when ages are unlinked, and in this example leads to support for a younger age for the MOTH site compared with the Turin Hill site. There is also a minor effect on the tree topology of acanthodians. These new MCMC proposals should be widely applicable to studies that employ tip dating, particularly when the terminals are coded as individual specimens. ©2020 King and Rücklin.Entities:
Keywords: Acanthodians; BEAST2; Devonian; Fossils; MOTH; Prior; Stratigraphy; Tip-dating; Turin Hill
Year: 2020 PMID: 32617191 PMCID: PMC7323711 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.9368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1An MCMC proposal enforcing the correct ordering of fossil sites within a sequence, but allowing overlapping uncertainty bounds.
(A–B) The blue lines represented the sampled ages of two fossil sites (light blue: younger site, dark blue: older site) . The range of possible values for new proposals at a particular point in the Markov chain (part A and B represent different points in the chain) depends on the current value of the other site in the sequence. Arrows indicate the possible range of new proposals (proposals outside this range are assigned a prior probability of 0). (C) Implementation of this operator on an empirical dataset leads to non-uniform effective priors on site age (in this case two formations from the Early Devonian of Spitzbergen). Note that colours are plotted with transparency to show overlap.
Figure 2Linking the tip ages of fossils from the same site leads to increased precision of age estimates and has minor effects on tree topology.
(A) 95% HPD intervals for individual taxa within two fossil sites (light green, Turin Hill taxa; light orange, MOTH taxa), compared with 95% HPD interval when tip ages within fossil sites are linked (dark green, Turin Hill; dark orange, MOTH). Circles represent median estimates. (B–C) 50% majority rule cladogram (in part) from the analysis with independent tip ages (B) and with linked tip ages for fossil sites (C).