INVESTIGADORES
POL Diego
artículos
Título:
Dealing with incompleteness: new advances for the use of fossils in phylogenetic analysis
Autor/es:
ESCAPA, I.; POL, D.
Revista:
PALAIOS
Editorial:
SEPM-SOC SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
Referencias:
Año: 2011 vol. 26 p. 121 - 124
ISSN:
0883-1351
Resumen:
The importance of fossils in understanding the evolutionary history of organisms was a controversial topic of debate during the first few decades in the history of phylogenetic systematics. During this time some authors suggested that extinct taxa could have only a minor role in phylogeny reconstruction (e.g., Patterson, 1981). For the most part, these types of bold statements were based on the fact that fossils are usually incomplete and, therefore, presumably not capable of over- turning hypotheses based on the wealth of phylogenetic information that extant taxa provide. However, phylogenetic studies based only on extant organisms are certainly missing a large part of the diversity that arose during the evolutionary history of a taxonomic group and therefore use a highly biased sampling of the available information.