Periodic Reporting for period 1 - BAYESLAND (Community Assembly on Islands: A phylogenetic Bayesian approach)
Période du rapport: 2016-04-01 au 2018-03-31
Scientists use mathematical models to try and retrace the movements of species in the past (biogeographic models). Biogeographic models estimate the most likely scenarios of past migration, including the number and type of migration events that may have occurred. Such inferences differ a lot among the taxa considered. BAYESLAND aimed to develop some of the currently existing biogeographic models to include new types of data, so as to understand better what determines migration patterns. In particular, the models developed in BAYESLAND should help understand why some species migrate more than others, estimate the importance of migration between populations of the same species, what is the relative importance of geographic versus ecological factors in determining the frequency of migration events.
Understanding past migration patterns and processes is important to understand the plasticity of current ecosystems. Within which geographic perimeter do species move so much that they form genetically homogenous populations? How rapidly can species shift their geographic distribution to respond to human disturbance or climate change?
The results of BAYESLAND are to be disseminated to the scientific community through a series of articles in scientific journals, and through oral presentations and posters at international conferences. Furthermore, BAYESLAND will also serve to summarize existing knowledge in phylogenetic modelling, through the publication of a paper reviewing the broad diversity of phylogenetic models.