The impact of molecular data on the phylogenetic position of the putative oldest crown crocodilian and the age of the clade

Author:

Darlim Gustavo1ORCID,Lee Michael S. Y.23ORCID,Walter Jules14ORCID,Rabi Márton15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geosciences, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen, Hölderlinstraße 12, 72074 Tübingen, Germany

2. School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, South Australia 5001, Australia

3. Australia Earth Sciences Section, South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, South Australia 5000, Australia

4. Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Universitàt degli Studi di Torino, Via Valperga Caluso 35, 10125 Torino, Italy

5. Central Natural Science Collections, Martin-Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, D-06108 Halle (Saale), Germany

Abstract

The use of molecular data for living groups is vital for interpreting fossils, especially when morphology-only analyses retrieve problematic phylogenies for living forms. These topological discrepancies impact on the inferred phylogenetic position of many fossil taxa. In Crocodylia, morphology-based phylogenetic inferences differ fundamentally in placing Gavialis basal to all other living forms, whereas molecular data consistently unite it with crocodylids. The Cenomanian Portugalosuchus azenhae was recently described as the oldest crown crocodilian, with affinities to Gavialis , based on morphology-only analyses, thus representing a potentially important new molecular clock calibration . Here, we performed analyses incorporating DNA data into these morphological datasets, using scaffold and supermatrix (total evidence) approaches, in order to evaluate the position of basal crocodylians, including Portugalosuchus . Our analyses incorporating DNA data robustly recovered Portugalosuchus outside Crocodylia (as well as thoracosaurs, planocraniids and Borealosuchus spp.), questioning the status of Portugalosuchus as crown crocodilian and any future use as a node calibration in molecular clock studies. Finally, we discuss the impact of ambiguous fossil calibration and how, with the increasing size of phylogenomic datasets, the molecular scaffold might be an efficient (though imperfect) approximation of more rigorous but demanding supermatrix analyses.

Funder

Volkswagen Stiftung Research in Museums

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

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