Push of the past
The push of the past is a type of survivorship bias associated with evolutionary diversification when extinction is possible. Groups that survive a long time are likely to have “got off to a flying start”, and this statistical bias creates an illusion of a true slow-down of diversification rate through time.
Birth–Death modelling in evolutionary studies
The evolutionary processes of speciation and extinction can be modelled with a stochastic “birth–death model”, which is an important component in the study of macroevolution. A BDM assigns each species a certain probability of splitting or going extinct per interval of time. This gives rise to an exponential distribution, with the number of species in a particular clade N at any time t given byalthough this expression only gives the expected value when and are large.
In the special case of there being no extinction, this simplifies to the so-called "Yule process".
Lineage-through-time plots
A different type of plot of diversity through time, called a “lineage through time” plot, retrospectively reconstructs the number of lineages that led to the living species of a group. This is equivalent to constructing a dated phylogeny and then counting how many branches are present at each time interval. As we know retrospectively that all such lineages survived until the present, it follows that no extinction is possible along them. It can be shown that the rate of production of new lineages through time is given by.Survivorship bias in diversification
Rather than considering the distribution of all possible stochastic outcomes for given values of and it is also possible to consider what happens when certain conditions of survivorship are imposed on the possible outcomes.Push of the past
If a BDM is forward-modelled, i.e. if the fate of an original single species is modelled through time, then a wide range of possible outcomes can occur, as the process is stochastic. With significant extinction rates, any particular clade is likely to be short-lived. However, we know that relatively long-lived clades such as the plants or animals by definition did not go extinct. As a result, their patterns of diversification will be a sub-set of all the possible outcomes for diversifications with their particular values of and - all patterns with early extinction will be excluded. Imposing the condition of survival on a clade implies that rates of early diversification will be higher than expected. It can be shown that for a long-lived clade, the expected initial short-term rate of diversification is approximately, as opposed to the long-term rate of. However, the wide confidence intervals on this value mean that values of initial diversification of up to fall within the 95% range. Long-lived clades should thus show a characteristic early burst of diversification that quickly declines to the long-term rate, an effect called the "push of the past".Pull of the present
For a normal-sized clade, the push of the past is only observed in the raw count of species through time, but the rate of lineage increase is affected as the present is approached. This is because recently created sub-clades within a particular group have an expected lifetime, and as the present is approached, these sub-clades will not have had time to go extinct. Thus, the rate of creation of reconstructed lineages should increase in the near past from to in the present - living species by definition have an observed zero extinction rate. This theoretical apparent increase in the rate of lineage production has been termed the "pull of the present".In reality, the “pull of the present” has proven difficult to demonstrate: rates of lineage production in reconstructed phylogenies often show a slow-down or even decrease as the present is approached. This conundrum has been much discussed, and two major solutions have been proposed: first, that diversification is diversity dependent, so that as the carrying capacity of the environment is reached the rate of lineage production slows; secondly, that our modern species concept does not properly capture the “lineages” of BDM, and that speciation as we recognize it is only the end point of a drawn-out process of splitting of subpopulations through time, each of which could be considered to be a lineage in itself.