Author:
Colgan D. J.,McLauchlan A.,Wilson G. D. F.,Livingston S. P.,Edgecombe G. D.,Macaranas J.,Cassis G.,Gray M. R.
Abstract
The range of DNA sequences used to study the interrelationships of the major
arthropod groups (chelicerates, myriapods, hexapods and crustaceans) is
limited. Here we investigate the value of two genes not previously employed in
arthropod phylogenetics. Histone H3 data were collected for 31 species and
small nuclear ribonucleic acid U2 data for 29 species. The sequences provided
a total of 460 sites and 192 parsimony-informative characters. H3 analyses
showed substantial codon usage bias, but had a low consistency index (0.26).
Consistency indices were higher for the U2 data (0.49), suggesting that the
class of snRNAs may provide several phylogenetically useful genes.
The present data are not by themselves sufficient to clarify major arthropod
group relationships. Partitioned data for H3 and U2 are incongruent according
to Incongruence Length Difference tests. Although the most parsimonious trees,
based on combined analyses of all taxa, differ substantially from
morphology-based trees, anomalous groupings are weakly supported with only one
exception. The trees uphold monophyly of Onychophora, Branchiopoda, and
Malacostraca (rather than the rival Phyllopoda). Cladistic analyses
constraining the monophyly of morphologically defined classes do not
significantly distinguish between the main rival hypotheses of major clade
relationships. Combined (‘spliced’) analysis of both genes
improves topological congruence with morphological groupings relative to that
of either partition. Character congruence between H3, U2, and morphology is
increased by downweighting (but not excluding) transitions and third codons.
Analyses of four-taxon statements using PHYLTEST found significant support for
the basal position of the Crustacea among the euarthropods. This support may
be due to the similarity of chelicerates, myriapods and hexapods in percentage
GC content.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
875 articles.
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