Morphological Characters Can Strongly Influence Early Animal Relationships Inferred from Phylogenomic Data Sets

Author:

Neumann Johannes S123,Desalle Rob23,Narechania Apurva3,Schierwater Bernd234,Tessler Michael23

Affiliation:

1. Richard Gilder Graduate School, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024, USA

2. Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024, USA

3. Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024, USA

4. ITZ, Division of Ecology and Evolution, Tierärztliche Hochschule Hannover, Bünteweg 9, 30559 Hannover, Germany

Abstract

Abstract There are considerable phylogenetic incongruencies between morphological and phylogenomic data for the deep evolution of animals. This has contributed to a heated debate over the earliest-branching lineage of the animal kingdom: the sister to all other Metazoa (SOM). Here, we use published phylogenomic data sets ($\sim $45,000–400,000 characters in size with $\sim $15–100 taxa) that focus on early metazoan phylogeny to evaluate the impact of incorporating morphological data sets ($\sim $15–275 characters). We additionally use small exemplar data sets to quantify how increased taxon sampling can help stabilize phylogenetic inferences. We apply a plethora of common methods, that is, likelihood models and their “equivalent” under parsimony: character weighting schemes. Our results are at odds with the typical view of phylogenomics, that is, that genomic-scale data sets will swamp out inferences from morphological data. Instead, weighting morphological data 2–10$\times $ in both likelihood and parsimony can in some cases “flip” which phylum is inferred to be the SOM. This typically results in the molecular hypothesis of Ctenophora as the SOM flipping to Porifera (or occasionally Placozoa). However, greater taxon sampling improves phylogenetic stability, with some of the larger molecular data sets ($>$200,000 characters and up to $\sim $100 taxa) showing node stability even with $\geqq100\times $ upweighting of morphological data. Accordingly, our analyses have three strong messages. 1) The assumption that genomic data will automatically “swamp out” morphological data is not always true for the SOM question. Morphological data have a strong influence in our analyses of combined data sets, even when outnumbered thousands of times by molecular data. Morphology therefore should not be counted out a priori. 2) We here quantify for the first time how the stability of the SOM node improves for several genomic data sets when the taxon sampling is increased. 3) The patterns of “flipping points” (i.e., the weighting of morphological data it takes to change the inferred SOM) carry information about the phylogenetic stability of matrices. The weighting space is an innovative way to assess comparability of data sets that could be developed into a new sensitivity analysis tool. [Metazoa; Morphology; Phylogenomics; Weighting.]

Funder

US Department of Energy BER

Korein Family Foundation Lewis and Dorothy Cullman Program in Molecular Systematics

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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