Major Revisions in Pancrustacean Phylogeny and Evidence of Sensitivity to Taxon Sampling

Author:

Bernot James P12ORCID,Owen Christopher L3ORCID,Wolfe Joanna M4ORCID,Meland Kenneth5,Olesen Jørgen6,Crandall Keith A17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Invertebrate Zoology, US National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution , Washington, DC , USA

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut , Storrs, CT , USA

3. Systematic Entomology Laboratory, USDA-ARS, ℅ National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution , Washington, DC , USA

4. Museum of Comparative Zoology and Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University , Cambridge, MA , USA

5. Department of Biology, University of Bergen , Bergen , Norway

6. Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen , Denmark

7. Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University , Washington, DC , USA

Abstract

Abstract The clade Pancrustacea, comprising crustaceans and hexapods, is the most diverse group of animals on earth, containing over 80% of animal species and half of animal biomass. It has been the subject of several recent phylogenomic analyses, yet relationships within Pancrustacea show a notable lack of stability. Here, the phylogeny is estimated with expanded taxon sampling, particularly of malacostracans. We show small changes in taxon sampling have large impacts on phylogenetic estimation. By analyzing identical orthologs between two slightly different taxon sets, we show that the differences in the resulting topologies are due primarily to the effects of taxon sampling on the phylogenetic reconstruction method. We compare trees resulting from our phylogenomic analyses with those from the literature to explore the large tree space of pancrustacean phylogenetic hypotheses and find that statistical topology tests reject the previously published trees in favor of the maximum likelihood trees produced here. Our results reject several clades including Caridoida, Eucarida, Multicrustacea, Vericrustacea, and Syncarida. Notably, we find Copepoda nested within Allotriocarida with high support and recover a novel relationship between decapods, euphausiids, and syncarids that we refer to as the Syneucarida. With denser taxon sampling, we find Stomatopoda sister to this latter clade, which we collectively name Stomatocarida, dividing Malacostraca into three clades: Leptostraca, Peracarida, and Stomatocarida. A new Bayesian divergence time estimation is conducted using 13 vetted fossils. We review our results in the context of other pancrustacean phylogenetic hypotheses and highlight 15 key taxa to sample in future studies.

Funder

NSF PRFB Program

NSF DEB

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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