Abstract
Roderic Page’s new book, Tangled Trees: Phylogeny, Cospeciation and
Coevolution (2003), is a worthwhile read for anyone interested in either
methodological issues in systematics, or how organisms shape one another’s
selective environments. “Cospeciation,” for the uninitiated, is the concurrent
speciation of two or more lineages that are ecologically associated (e.g.
host-parasite associations, as well as mutualistic or symbiotic associations).
“Coevolution,” in contrast, is the reciprocal adaptation of hosts and parasite
taxa. The main focus of Page’s book is thus when, how and why the branching
process of host taxa mirrors that of parasite taxa. “Parasite” here is broadly
conceived to be anything from a louse to a virus to a retrotransposon, and
“host” may be anything from a genome to a whale.