diff --git a/tex/manuscript/abstract.tex b/tex/manuscript/abstract.tex index 7a3fdae..421d911 100644 --- a/tex/manuscript/abstract.tex +++ b/tex/manuscript/abstract.tex @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ -Many +% Many % biotic and abiotic -factors that influence the distribution, abundance, and +Factors that influence the distribution, abundance, and diversification of species can simultaneously affect multiple evolutionary lineages within or across communities. These include environmental changes and inter-specific ecological interactions @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ divergence times. Our results also suggest that previous estimates of co-expansion among five Alaskan populations of threespine sticklebacks (\spp{Gasterosteus aculeatus}) -were likely spurious, and driven by a combination of mispecified prior +were likely spurious, and driven by a combination of misspecified prior assumptions and the lack of information about the timing of demographic changes when invariant charcters are ignored. We conclude by discussing potential avenues to improve the estimation of diff --git a/tex/manuscript/main.tex b/tex/manuscript/main.tex index bdf8b64..507161c 100644 --- a/tex/manuscript/main.tex +++ b/tex/manuscript/main.tex @@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ shared evolutionary events from genomic data: Inferring shared demographic events is challenging} -\author[1]{Jamie R.\ Oaks\thanks{Corresponding author: \href{mailto:joaks@auburn.edu}{\tt joaks@auburn.edu}}} +\author[1]{Jamie R.\ Oaks \thanks{Corresponding author: \href{mailto:joaks@auburn.edu}{\tt joaks@auburn.edu}}} \author[1,2]{Nadia L'Bahy} \author[1]{Kerry A.\ Cobb} \affil[1]{Department of Biological Sciences \& Museum of Natural History, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama 36849} diff --git a/tex/manuscript/results.tex b/tex/manuscript/results.tex index baf174c..cb5f324 100644 --- a/tex/manuscript/results.tex +++ b/tex/manuscript/results.tex @@ -417,7 +417,7 @@ \subsection{Reassessing the co-expansion of stickleback populations} their uniform prior on the timing of demographic changes. In light of our simulation results, the support for a single event based solely on SNPs, seen here and in \citet{Xue2015}, is likely caused by a combination of -(1) mispecified priors, and +(1) misspecified priors, and (2) the lack of information about demographic history when invariant characters are discarded. Our estimates using all of the sites in the stickleback RADseq loci should be