Quantifying the extent of morphological homoplasy: A phylogenetic analysis of 490 characters in Drosophila

Evol Lett. 2019 Apr 22;3(3):286-298. doi: 10.1002/evl3.115. eCollection 2019 Jun.

Abstract

Homoplasy is a fundamental phenomenon in evolutionary biology but an appraisal of its extent at the morphological level is still lacking. Here, we analyzed the evolution of 490 morphological characters conceptualized among 56 drosophilid species. We found that two thirds of morphological changes were homoplastic and that the level of homoplasy depended on the stage of development and the type of the organ, with the adult terminalia being the least homoplastic. In spite of its predominance at the character change level, homoplasy accounts for only ∼13% of between species similarities in pairwise comparisons. These results provide empirical insights on the limits of morphological changes and the frequency of recurrent evolution.

Keywords: Character conceptualization; character state coding; developmental hourglass; genitalia; maximum parsimony; recurrent evolution.