Abstract

Abstract The increasing availability of phylogenetic data, computing power and informatics tools has facilitated a rapid expansion of studies that apply phylogenetic data and methods to community ecology. Several key areas are reviewed in which phylogenetic information helps to resolve long‐standing controversies in community ecology, challenges previous assumptions, and opens new areas of investigation. In particular, studies in phylogenetic community ecology have helped to reveal the multitude of processes driving community assembly and have demonstrated the importance of evolution in the assembly process. Phylogenetic approaches have also increased understanding of the consequences of community interactions for speciation, adaptation and extinction. Finally, phylogenetic community structure and composition holds promise for predicting ecosystem processes and impacts of global change. Major challenges to advancing these areas remain. In particular, determining the extent to which ecologically relevant traits are phylogenetically conserved or convergent, and over what temporal scale, is critical to understanding the causes of community phylogenetic structure and its evolutionary and ecosystem consequences. Harnessing phylogenetic information to understand and forecast changes in diversity and dynamics of communities is a critical step in managing and restoring the Earth’s biota in a time of rapid global change.

Keywords

Phylogenetic treeEcologyPhylogenetic diversityCommunityBiologyPhylogenetic comparative methodsPhylogeneticsMacroecologyEvolutionary ecologyCommunity structureConvergent evolutionEcosystemBiodiversityEvolutionary biology

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Publication Info

Year
2009
Type
review
Volume
12
Issue
7
Pages
693-715
Citations
2274
Access
Closed

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Jeannine Cavender‐Bares, Kenneth H. Kozak, Paul V. A. Fine et al. (2009). The merging of community ecology and phylogenetic biology. Ecology Letters , 12 (7) , 693-715. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01314.x

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DOI
10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01314.x