Advanced search×

Phylogenomic analyses and improved resolution of Cetartiodactyla.

Mol Phylogenet Evol 61(2):255-64 (2011) PMID 21315162

The remarkable antiquity, diversity, and significance in the ecology and evolution of Cetartiodactyla have inspired numerous attempts to resolve their phylogenetic relationships. However, previous analyses based on limited samples of nuclear genes or mitochondrial DNA sequences have generated results that were either inconsistent with one another, weakly supported, or highly sensitive to analytical conditions. Here, we present strongly supported results based upon over 1.4 Mb of an aligned DNA sequence matrix from 110 single-copy nuclear protein-coding genes of 21 Cetartiodactyla species, which represent major Cetartiodactyla lineages, and three species of Perissodactyla and Carnivora as outgroups. Phylogenetic analysis of this newly developed genomic sequence data using a codon-based model and recently developed models of the rate autocorrelation resolved the phylogenetic relationships of the major cetartiodactylan lineages and of those lineages with a high degree of confidence. Cetacea was found to nest within Artiodactyla as the sister group of Hippopotamidae, and Tylopoda was corroborated as the sole base clade of Cetartiodactyla. Within Cetacea, the monophyletic status of Odontoceti relative to Mysticeti, the basal position of Physeteroidea in Odontoceti, the non-monophyly of the river dolphins, and the sister relationship between Delphinidae and Monodontidae+Phocoenidae were strongly supported. In particular, the groups of Tursiops (bottlenose dolphins) and Stenella (spotted dolphins) were validated as unnatural groups. Additionally, a very narrow time frame of ∼3 My (million years) was found for the rapid diversification of delphinids in the late Miocene, which made it difficult to resolve the phylogenetic relationships within the Delphinidae, especially for previous studies with limited data sets. The present study provides a statistically well-supported phylogenetic framework of Cetartiodactyla, which represents an important step toward ending some of the often-heated, century-long debate on their evolution.

DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2011.02.009
Version: za2963e q8zad q8zbb q8zc2 q8zd5 q8ze3 q8zf1 q8zg2

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. The Hot and Energetic Universe: A White Paper presenting the science theme motivating the Athena+ mission

    arXiv:1306.2307 [astro-ph.HE] 10 Jun 2013

    We see today? 2) How do black holes grow and shape the Universe? Hot gas in clusters, groups and The intergalactic medium dominates the baryonic content of the local Universe. To understand the astrophysical processes responsible for the formation and Assembly of these large structures, it is necess...
  2. Terrestrial Planet Formation During the Migration and Resonance Crossings of the Giant Planets

    arXiv:1306.3287 [astro-ph.EP] 14 Jun 2013

    We investigated the effects of the Planetesimal-driven migration of Jupiter and Saturn, and the influence of their Mutual 1:2 MMR crossing on terrestrial planet formation for the first time, by Performing N-body simulations. These simulations considered distinct timescales Of MMR crossing and planet...
  3. Real-time planar flow velocity measurements using an optical flow algorithm implemented on GPU

    arXiv:1306.2461 [physics.flu-dyn] 11 Jun 2013

    This paper presents a high speed implementation of an optical flow algorithm which computes planar velocity fields in an experimental flow. Real-time computation of the flow velocity field allows the experimentalist to have instantaneous access to quantitative features of the flow. This can be very...