The Rediscovery of a Relict Unlocks the First Global Phylogeny of Whip Spiders (Amblypygi)

Author:

de Miranda Gustavo S1,Kulkarni Siddharth S2,Tagliatela Jéssica3,Baker Caitlin M2,Giupponi Alessandro P L4,Labarque Facundo M3ORCID,Gavish-Regev Efrat5,Rix Michael G6,Carvalho Leonardo S7,Fusari Lívia Maria8,Harvey Mark S910,Wood Hannah M1,Sharma Prashant P2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution Department of Entomology, , 10th and Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20560 , USA

2. University of Wisconsin–Madison Department of Integrative Biology, , 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI 53706 , USA

3. Universidade Federal de São Carlos, Campus São Carlos Departamento de Ecologia e Biologia Evolutiva, , Rodovia Washington Luís, Km 235 , 13565-905 São Paulo, Brazil

4. Lab. de Carrapatos e outros Vetores Ápteros LAC - CAVAISC; IOC - FIOCRUZ , Rio de Janeiro , Brazil

5. National Natural History Collections, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem , 91904 Jerusalem, Israel

6. Biodiversity and Geosciences Program, Queensland Museum , South Brisbane, QLD 4101, Australia

7. Universidade Federal do Piauí Campus Amílcar Ferreira Sobral, , 64808-605 Floriano, PI, Brazil

8. Universidade Federal de São Carlos, campus São Carlos Departamento de Hidrobiologia, , Rodovia Washington Luís, Km 235 , 13565-905 São Paulo, Brazil

9. Western Australian Museum Collections and Research Centre, , Welshpool, WA 6106, Australia

10. The University of Western Australia School of Biological Sciences, , Crawley, WA 6009, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Asymmetrical rates of cladogenesis and extinction abound in the tree of life, resulting in numerous minute clades that are dwarfed by larger sister groups. Such taxa are commonly regarded as phylogenetic relicts or “living fossils” when they exhibit an ancient first appearance in the fossil record and prolonged external morphological stasis, particularly in comparison to their more diversified sister groups. Due to their special status, various phylogenetic relicts tend to be well-studied and prioritized for conservation. A notable exception to this trend is found within Amblypygi (“whip spiders”), a visually striking order of functionally hexapodous arachnids that are notable for their antenniform first walking leg pair (the eponymous “whips”). Paleoamblypygi, the putative sister group to the remaining Amblypygi, is known from Late Carboniferous and Eocene deposits but is survived by a single living species, Paracharon caecusHansen (1921), that was last collected in 1899. Due to the absence of genomic sequence-grade tissue for this vital taxon, there is no global molecular phylogeny for Amblypygi to date, nor a fossil-calibrated estimation of divergences within the group. Here, we report a previously unknown species of Paleoamblypygi from a cave site in Colombia. Capitalizing upon this discovery, we generated the first molecular phylogeny of Amblypygi, integrating ultraconserved element sequencing with legacy Sanger datasets and including described extant genera. To quantify the impact of sampling Paleoamblypygi on divergence time estimation, we performed in silico experiments with pruning of Paracharon. We demonstrate that the omission of relicts has a significant impact on the accuracy of node dating approaches that outweighs the impact of excluding ingroup fossils, which bears upon the ancestral range reconstruction for the group. Our results underscore the imperative for biodiversity discovery efforts in elucidating the phylogenetic relationships of “dark taxa,” and especially phylogenetic relicts in tropical and subtropical habitats. The lack of reciprocal monophyly for Charontidae and Charinidae leads us to subsume them into one family, Charontidae, new synonymy.

Funder

National Museum of Natural History

CAPES

Binational Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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