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There is no taxon-free lunch

There is no taxon-free lunch

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Authors

Indrė Žliobaitė 

Abstract

Over the last few decades, the term “taxon-free” has been widely used in paleoecological literature to highlight reasoning via ecomorphological or other functional traits of organisms as opposed to reasoning via taxonomic affiliations and phylogenetic conservatism. In practice, however, “taxon-free” inferences are very rarely free from using taxonomic information and occasionally they are even using phylogenetic conservatism to infer environmental or ecological conditions of taxa in the past. While some publications acknowledge the mismatch between the semantics of the term and the practice, others highlight the lack of reliance on taxonomic information as an advantage of the methodology, even in practice that reliance is present in a masked form. Here I present a structured survey on the use of the term “taxon-free” in paleoecological literature with an emphasis on mammalian community paleoecology. Based on the results I advocate dropping the use of the term “taxon-free” to minimize the potential for misinterpretations and use the term “trait-based” approaches instead, or alternatively, “phylogeny-free” if absence of reliance on phylogenetic niche conservatism is to be highlighted.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/X2R35C

Subjects

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Keywords

taxon-free, taxon-based, phylogenetic niche conservatism, evolutionary theory

Dates

Published: 2025-12-06 09:39

Last Updated: 2025-12-06 09:39

Older Versions

License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Conflict of interest statement:
none

Data and Code Availability Statement:
n.a.

Language:
English