Testing the Utility of Alternative Metrics of Branch Support to Address the Ancient Evolutionary Radiation of Tunas, Stromateoids, and Allies (Teleostei: Pelagiaria)

Author:

Arcila Dahiana12,Hughes Lily C345,Meléndez-Vazquez Bruce12,Baldwin Carole C5,White William T6,Carpenter Kent E7,Williams Jeffrey T5,Santos Mudjekeewis D8,Pogonoski John J6,Miya Masaki9,Ortí Guillermo35,Betancur-R Ricardo2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ichthyology, Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, 2401 Chautauqua Avenue, Norman, OK 73072, USA

2. Department of Biology, University of Oklahoma, 730 Van Vleet Oval, Richards Hall Norman, OK 73019, USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences, The George Washington University, 2029 G Street NW, Bell Hall, Washington, DC 20052, USA

4. Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, The University of Chicago, Illinois, 1027 E 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637, USA

5. Department of Vertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, 10th & Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20560, USA

6. CSIRO Australian National Fish Collection, National Research Collections Australia, Castray Esplande, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia

7. Department of Biological Sciences, Old Dominion University, 5115 Hampton Boulevard Norfolk, VA 23529, USA

8. Department of Agriculture, Genetic Fingerprinting Laboratory, National Fisheries Research and Development Institute, #101 Mother Ignacia St., Quezon City 1103, Philippines

9. Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Natural History Museum and Institute, Chiba, 955-2 Aoba-cho, Chuo-ku, Chiba 260-8682, Japan

Abstract

Abstract The use of high-throughput sequencing technologies to produce genome-scale data sets was expected to settle some long-standing controversies across the Tree of Life, particularly in areas where short branches occur at deep timescales. Instead, these data sets have often yielded many well-supported but conflicting topologies, and highly variable gene-tree distributions. A variety of branch-support metrics beyond the nonparametric bootstrap are now available to assess how robust a phylogenetic hypothesis may be, as well as new methods to quantify gene-tree discordance. We applied multiple branch-support metrics to a study of an ancient group of marine fishes (Teleostei: Pelagiaria) whose interfamilial relationships have proven difficult to resolve due to a rapid accumulation of lineages very early in its history. We analyzed hundreds of loci including published ultraconserved elements and newly generated exonic data along with their flanking regions to represent all 16 extant families for more than 150 out of 284 valid species in the group. Branch support was typically lower at inter- than intra-familial relationships regardless of the type of marker used. Several nodes that were highly supported with bootstrap had a very low site and gene-tree concordance, revealing underlying conflict. Despite this conflict, we were able to identify four consistent interfamilial clades, each comprised of two or three families. Combining exons with their flanking regions also produced increased branch lengths at the deep branches of the pelagiarian tree. Our results demonstrate the limitations of employing current metrics of branch support and species-tree estimation when assessing the confidence of ancient evolutionary radiations and emphasize the necessity to embrace alternative measurements to explore phylogenetic uncertainty and discordance in phylogenomic data sets.[Concatenation; exons; introns; phylogenomics; species-tree methods; target capture.]

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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