globalchange  > 全球变化的国际研究计划
项目编号: 1701459
项目名称:
DISSERTATION RESEARCH: A phylogenomic window into trophic niche evolution in frogs
作者: Daniel Rabosky
承担单位: University of Michigan Ann Arbor
批准年: 2017
开始日期: 2017-06-01
结束日期: 2019-05-31
资助金额: 20134
资助来源: US-NSF
项目类别: Standard Grant
国家: US
语种: 英语
特色学科分类: Biological Sciences - Environmental Biology
英文关键词: frog ; diet ; rate ; relative abundance ; animal ; trophic evolution ; species diversification ; stomach contents ; mitochondrial genome ; accessible datum ; other major biodiversity question ; international partnership ; large quantity ; phylogenetic variability ; research training ; new application ; unanswered question ; diversification rate ; basic natural history datum ; conservation strategy ; dna sequencing ; broad range ; frog diet ; phylogenetic conservatism ; resultant datum ; future scientific research ; undergraduate student ; genomic datum ; frog species ; dietary specialization ; complex dataset ; species ; diet breadth ; research project
英文摘要: Across the Tree of Life, diet varies widely among species. Some species have very specialized diets that consist of only one or a few items, while other species appear to eat a broad range of food items. Why some animals have highly specialized diets and how species adapt to new food items remain unanswered questions in the field of biology. This project will use frogs as a study system to understand how and why animals become specialized on different food resources. To do so, it will develop new applications of DNA sequencing to generate data on diet and new methods for analyzing complex datasets. The new methods will be broadly applicable to any system beyond just frogs and the resultant data can provide insight into other major biodiversity questions, such as why there are more species in the tropics compared to temperate areas. This project will develop international partnerships, provide research training to undergraduate students at the University of Michigan, generate large quantities of publicly accessible data for future scientific research, and produce basic natural history data that can be used to inform conservation strategies for endangered frog species.


This research project will integrate methods from phylogenetic community ecology and macroevolution to answer questions about the evolution of diet and how trophic ecology correlates with diversification. It will utilize high-throughput sequencing to analyze stomach contents of frogs from sites across the New World. This work will generate a dataset of prey items identified to species level with information about the relative abundance of each in a frog's diet. The proposed research will use the mitochondrial genomes of the prey items to construct a phylogenetic tree of the prey to pair with a phylogeny of frogs that will be estimated with genomic data. With these two trees, measures of diet breadth and overlap that reflect the phylogenetic variability in the diet and the relative abundance of each prey type will be calculated and used to infer rates of species diversification and trophic evolution. These metrics and estimated rates will then be used to examine phylogenetic conservatism in frog diet, the effect of dietary specialization on speciation, and the correlation between rates of trophic evolution and diversification rates.
资源类型: 项目
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/90091
Appears in Collections:全球变化的国际研究计划
科学计划与规划

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Recommended Citation:
Daniel Rabosky. DISSERTATION RESEARCH: A phylogenomic window into trophic niche evolution in frogs. 2017-01-01.
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