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Journal ArticleDOI

Establishing a time-scale for plant evolution

TLDR
A post-Jurassic origin of angiosperms and a post-Cambrian origin of land plants are rejected, and it is suggested that the establishment of the major embryophyte lineages occurred at a much slower tempo than suggested in most previous studies.
Abstract
• Plants have utterly transformed the planet, but testing hypotheses of causality requires a reliable time-scale for plant evolution. While clock methods have been extensively developed, less attention has been paid to the correct interpretation and appropriate implementation of fossil data. • We constructed 17 calibrations, consisting of minimum constraints and soft maximum constraints, for divergences between model representatives of the major land plant lineages. Using a data set of seven plastid genes, we performed a cross-validation analysis to determine the consistency of the calibrations. Six molecular clock analyses were then conducted, one with the original calibrations, and others exploring the impact on divergence estimates of changing maxima at basal nodes, and prior probability densities within calibrations. • Cross-validation highlighted Tracheophyta and Euphyllophyta calibrations as inconsistent, either because their soft maxima were overly conservative or because of undetected rate variation. Molecular clock analyses yielded estimates ranging from 568-815 million yr before present (Ma) for crown embryophytes and from 175-240 Ma for crown angiosperms. • We reject both a post-Jurassic origin of angiosperms and a post-Cambrian origin of land plants. Our analyses also suggest that the establishment of the major embryophyte lineages occurred at a much slower tempo than suggested in most previous studies. These conclusions are entirely compatible with current palaeobotanical data, although not necessarily with their interpretation by palaeobotanists.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Synthesizing phylogenetic knowledge for ecological research

TL;DR: It is argued that the collective phylogenetic knowledge embodied in the literature of systematics is a valuable resource that can be tapped in assembling synthetic trees and could, under some circumstances, better represent ''what the authors know'' about phylogenetic relationships than results obtained from automated pipelines.
Journal ArticleDOI

A 350‐million‐year legacy of fire adaptation among conifers

TL;DR: It is concluded that many early conifers were serotinous in response to intense crown fires, indicating that fire may have had a major impact on the evolution of plant traits as far back as 350 Ma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accounting for Uncertainty in the Evolutionary Timescale of Green Plants Through Clock-Partitioning and Fossil Calibration Strategies.

TL;DR: This work infer the evolutionary timescale of green plants by analysing 81 protein-coding genes from 99 chloroplast genomes, using a core set of 21 fossil calibrations and presents divergence-time estimates of the major groups ofgreen plants that take into account various sources of uncertainty.
Journal ArticleDOI

A simple method for estimating informative node age priors for the fossil calibration of molecular divergence time analyses.

TL;DR: This work provides a simple and easily implemented method that employs fossil data to estimate the likely amount of missing history prior to the oldest fossil occurrence of a clade, which can be used to fit an informative parametric prior probability distribution on a node age.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

PAML 4: Phylogenetic Analysis by Maximum Likelihood

TL;DR: PAML, currently in version 4, is a package of programs for phylogenetic analyses of DNA and protein sequences using maximum likelihood (ML), which can be used to estimate parameters in models of sequence evolution and to test interesting biological hypotheses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relaxed Phylogenetics and Dating with Confidence

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce a new approach to perform relaxed phylogenetic analysis, which can be used to estimate phylogenies and divergence times in the face of uncertainty in evolutionary rates and calibration times.
Book

A Geologic time scale

W. B. Harland
BookDOI

A Geologic Time Scale 2004

TL;DR: Gradstein et al. as discussed by the authors proposed a chronostratigraphy approach for linking time and rock in the context of geologic time scales, including the geomagnetic polarity time scale and stable isotope geochronology.
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