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Phylogenetic systematics, a.k.a. evolutionary trees : Using trees to learn about the evolution of diversity: The beetles' diet If you were to randomly pick an extant animal species, odds are that it would be a beetle. While there are 250,000 described species of plants, 12,000 described species of roundworms, and only 4,000 described species of mammals, there are over 350,000 beetle species described, with many more beetles yet to be discovered!
To understand what happened when these switches occurred, Farrell compared sister groups. He saw the same pattern again and again (as shown below): the lineage that switched to angiosperms speciated frequently and became very diverse, while the lineage that did not switch to angiosperms had a lower rate of speciation and did not become very diverse. Feeding on angiosperms is associated with higher rates of speciation (or lower rates of extinction it's hard to tell). This link between food and diversity is particularly compelling because it has played out several times in beetle evolution nature replicated the same experiment over and over again.
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View this article online at: Understanding Evolution © 2021 by The University of California Museum of Paleontology, Berkeley, and the Regents of the University of California |
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