Watching the clock: Studying variation in rates of molecular evolution between species

Date

2010

Authors

Lanfear, Robert
Welch, John J.
Bromham, Lindell

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

Evidence is accumulating that rates of molecular evolution vary substantially between species, and that this rate variation is partly determined by species characteristics. A better understanding of how and why rates of molecular evolution vary provides a window on evolutionary processes, and might facilitate improvements in DNA sequence analysis. Measuring rates of molecular evolution and identifying the correlates of rate variation present a unique set of challenges. We describe and compare recent methodological advances that have been proposed to deal with these challenges. We provide a guide to the theoretical basis and practical application of the methods, outline the types of data on which they can be used, and indicate the types of questions they can be used to ask.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: DNA; evolutionary biology; genetic analysis; molecular ecology; theoretical study; animal; biological model; genetic variability; molecular evolution; review; species differentiation; time; Animals; Evolution, Molecular; Genetic Speciation; Genetic Variat

Citation

Source

Trends in Ecology and Evolution

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31