Zootaxa2011,Issue(2946) :5.

A Response to Mooi, Williams and Gill

MATTHEW P. DAVIS EDWARD O. WILEY PROSANTA CHAKRABARTY MATTHEW T. CRAIG NANCY I. HOLCROFT RICHARD L. MAYDEN WM. LEO SMITH
Zootaxa2011,Issue(2946) :5.

A Response to Mooi, Williams and Gill

MATTHEW P. DAVIS 1EDWARD O. WILEY 2PROSANTA CHAKRABARTY 1MATTHEW T. CRAIG 3NANCY I. HOLCROFT 4RICHARD L. MAYDEN 5WM. LEO SMITH6
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作者信息

  • 1. Museum of Natural Science, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, U.S. A
  • 2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Biodiversity Research Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, U.S.A
  • 3. Department of Marine Sciences University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez, P.O. Box 9000, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico
  • 4. Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, KS 66210-1299, U.S.A
  • 5. Saint Louis University, Department of Biology, Laclede Ave., St. Louis, MO, U.S.A
  • 6. Department of Zoology, Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605,, U.S.A
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Abstract

We thank the editor of this special series in allowing us a short response to Mooi, Williams and Gill (2011). The space allocated for this rebuttal is small, so we address only the basic points, organized by their major headings.Mooi et al. again suggest that finding trees under various universally-used optimality criteria is "authority." We reject this argument. Their alternative of picking "good" characters that happen to evolve at a certain rate is equally authoritarian (indeed, it is easy to characterize just about any method as "authoritarian" because, well, it's a method; the only thing fully immune from the charge of "authoritarianism" is doing nothing). To explain: the usual manner in which characters are selected for morphological analysis follows three basic steps. (1) Characters that display random variation or as much variation within taxa as between taxa in an analysis are typically discarded. (2) Characters that show no variation between taxa in the study are discarded. (3) Characters that do not meet the above criteria but which are shared between two to N-l taxa in the study are analyzed. This amounts to a rate model of evolution. We don't see any particular problem with adopting such models, but investigatorsshould recognize them as models with their own optimality criteria. We might term it the "screen data for usefulness model." Mooi et al. argue in favor of a particular brand of this model, Three-Taxon Analysis (3ta), in which characters that change only once (i.e., without reversals) are chosen. We explain below why taking this course would be restrictive and misguided.

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出版年

2011
Zootaxa

Zootaxa

SCI
ISSN:1175-5326
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