Combining Phylogenomics and Fossils in Higher-Level Squamate Reptile Phylogeny: Molecular Data Change the Placement of Fossil Taxa
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 7 October 2010
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Systematic Biology
- Vol. 59 (6) , 674-688
- https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syq048
Abstract
Molecular data offer great potential to resolve the phylogeny of living taxa but can molecular data improve our understanding of relationships of fossil taxa? Simulations suggest that this is possible, but few empirical examples have demonstrated the ability of molecular data to change the placement of fossil taxa. We offer such an example here. We analyze the placement of snakes among squamate reptiles, combining published morphological data (363 characters) and new DNA sequence data (15,794 characters, 22 nuclear loci) for 45 living and 19 fossil taxa. We find several intriguing results. First, some fossil taxa undergo major changes in their phylogenetic position when molecular data are added. Second, most fossil taxa are placed with strong support in the expected clades by the combined data Bayesian analyses, despite each having >98% missing cells and despite recent suggestions that extensive missing data are problematic for Bayesian phylogenetics. Third, morphological data can change the placement of living taxa in combined analyses, even when there is an overwhelming majority of molecular characters. Finally, we find strong but apparently misleading signal in the morphological data, seemingly associated with a burrowing lifestyle in snakes, amphisbaenians, and dibamids. Overall, our results suggest promise for an integrated and comprehensive Tree of Life by combining molecular and morphological data for living and fossil taxa.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phylogeny And Systematics Of Squamata (Reptilia) Based On MorphologyBulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 2008
- Broad phylogenomic sampling improves resolution of the animal tree of lifeNature, 2008
- High-resolution species trees without concatenationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Tenrec Phylogeny and the Noninvasive Extraction of Nuclear DNASystematic Biology, 2006
- Partitioned Bayesian Analyses, Partition Choice, and the Phylogenetic Relationships of Scincid LizardsSystematic Biology, 2005
- Stem Lagomorpha and the Antiquity of GliresScience, 2005
- Prospects for Building the Tree of Life from Large Sequence DatabasesScience, 2004
- Reliability of Bayesian Posterior Probabilities and Bootstrap Frequencies in PhylogeneticsSystematic Biology, 2003
- Bayes or Bootstrap? A Simulation Study Comparing the Performance of Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo Sampling and Bootstrapping in Assessing Phylogenetic ConfidenceMolecular Biology and Evolution, 2003
- Mitochondrial DNA Evidence and Evolution in Varanoidea (Squamata)Cladistics, 2001