Molecular studies suggest that cartilaginous fishes have a terminal position in the piscine tree
Open Access
- 2 March 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 96 (5) , 2177-2182
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.96.5.2177
Abstract
The Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fishes) are commonly accepted as being sister group to the other extant Gnathostomata (jawed vertebrates). To clarify gnathostome relationships and to aid in resolving and dating the major piscine divergences, we have sequenced the complete mtDNA of the starry skate and have included it in phylogenetic analysis along with three squalomorph chondrichthyans—the common dogfish, the spiny dogfish, and the star spotted dogfish—and a number of bony fishes and amniotes. The direction of evolution within the gnathostome tree was established by rooting it with the most closely related non-gnathostome outgroup, the sea lamprey, as well as with some more distantly related taxa. The analyses placed the chondrichthyans in a terminal position in the piscine tree. These findings, which also suggest that the origin of the amniote lineage is older than the age of the oldest extant bony fishes (the lungfishes), challenge the evolutionary direction of several morphological characters that have been used in reconstructing gnathostome relationships. Applying as a calibration point the age of the oldest lungfish fossils, 400 million years, the molecular estimate placed the squalomorph/batomorph divergence at ≈190 million years before present. This dating is consistent with the occurrence of the earliest batomorph (skates and rays) fossils in the paleontological record. The split between gnathostome fishes and the amniote lineage was dated at ≈420 million years before present.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Caloramator viterbensis sp. nov., a novel thermophilic, glycerol-fermenting bacterium isolated from a hot spring in ItalyInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 2002
- Quartet Puzzling: A Quartet Maximum-Likelihood Method for Reconstructing Tree TopologiesMolecular Biology and Evolution, 1996
- Complete Sequence of the Mitochondrial DNA in the Sea UrchinArbacia lixula:Conserved Features of the Echinoid Mitochondrial GenomeMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 1996
- Phylogeny of the major tetrapod groups: Morphological data and divergence datesJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1990
- Sequence and gene organization of the chicken mitochondrial genomeJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990
- 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
- Nucleotide sequence and gene organization of sea urchin mitochondrial DNAJournal of Molecular Biology, 1988
- Complete sequence of bovine mitochondrial DNA conserved features of the mammalian mitochondrial genomeJournal of Molecular Biology, 1982
- Evolutionary trees from DNA sequences: A maximum likelihood approachJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1981
- Toward Defining the Course of Evolution: Minimum Change for a Specific Tree TopologySystematic Zoology, 1971