Molecular phylogenetics and the origins of placental mammals
Top Cited Papers
- 1 February 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 409 (6820) , 614-618
- https://doi.org/10.1038/35054550
Abstract
The precise hierarchy of ancient divergence events that led to the present assemblage of modern placental mammals has been an area of controversy among morphologists, palaeontologists and molecular evolutionists. Here we address the potential weaknesses of limited character and taxon sampling in a comprehensive molecular phylogenetic analysis of 64 species sampled across all extant orders of placental mammals. We examined sequence variation in 18 homologous gene segments (including nearly 10,000 base pairs) that were selected for maximal phylogenetic informativeness in resolving the hierarchy of early mammalian divergence. Phylogenetic analyses identify four primary superordinal clades: (I) Afrotheria (elephants, manatees, hyraxes, tenrecs, aardvark and elephant shrews); (II) Xenarthra (sloths, anteaters and armadillos); (III) Glires (rodents and lagomorphs), as a sister taxon to primates, flying lemurs and tree shrews; and (IV) the remaining orders of placental mammals (cetaceans, artiodactyls, perissodactyls, carnivores, pangolins, bats and core insectivores). Our results provide new insight into the pattern of the early placental mammal radiation.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Highly Congruent Molecular Support for a Diverse Superordinal Clade of Endemic African MammalsMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 1998
- Anthropoid OriginsScience, 1997
- Quartet Puzzling: A Quartet Maximum-Likelihood Method for Reconstructing Tree TopologiesMolecular Biology and Evolution, 1996
- Continental breakup and the ordinal diversification of birds and mammalsNature, 1996
- Phylogenetic position of the order Lagomorpha (rabbits, hares and allies)Nature, 1996
- Mammalian phytogeny: shaking the treeNature, 1992
- Evaluation of the maximum likelihood estimate of the evolutionary tree topologies from DNA sequence data, and the branching order in hominoideaJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1989
- Biomolecular Systematics of Eutherian Mammals: Phylogenetic Patterns and ClassificationSystematic Zoology, 1986
- Flying Primates? Megabats Have the Advanced Pathway from Eye to MidbrainScience, 1986
- The Principles of Classification and a Classification of MammalsJournal of Mammalogy, 1946