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The Chalcidoidea bush of life – a massive radiation blurred by mutational saturation

Authors :
Astrid Cruaud
Jean-Yves Rasplus
Junxia Zhang
Roger Burks
Gérard Delvare
Lucian Fusu
Alex Gumovsky
John T. Huber
Petr Janšta
Mircea-Dan Mitroiu
John S. Noyes
Simon van Noort
Austin Baker
Julie Böhmová
Hannes Baur
Bonnie B. Blaimer
Seán G. Brady
Kristýna Bubeníková
Marguerite Chartois
Robert S. Copeland
Natalie Dale-Skey Papilloud
Ana Dal Molin
Chrysalyn Dominguez
Marco Gebiola
Emilio Guerrieri
Robert L. Kresslein
Lars Krogmann
Emily Moriarty Lemmon
Elizabeth A. Murray
Sabine Nidelet
José Luis Nieves-Aldrey
Ryan K. Perry
Ralph S. Peters
Andrew Polaszek
Laure Sauné
Javier Torréns
Serguei Triapitsyn
Ekaterina V. Tselikh
Matthew Yoder
Alan R. Lemmon
James B. Woolley
John M. Heraty
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Capturing phylogenetic signal from a massive radiation can be daunting. The superfamily Chalcidoidea is an excellent example of a hyperdiverse group that has remained recalcitrant to phylogenetic resolution. Chalcidoidea are mostly parasitoid wasps that until now included 27 families, 87 subfamilies and as many as 500,000 estimated species. We combined 1007 exons obtained with Anchored Hybrid Enrichment with 1048 Ultra-Conserved Elements (UCEs) for 433 taxa including all extant families, over 95% of all subfamilies and 356 genera chosen to represent the vast diversity of the superfamily. Going back and forth between molecular results and our collective morphological and biological knowledge, we detected insidious bias driven by the saturation of nucleotide data and highlighted morphological convergences. Our final results are based on a concatenated analysis of the least saturated exons and UCE data sets (2054 loci, 284,106 sites). Our analyses support a sister relationship with Mymarommatoidea. Seven of the previously recognized families were not monophyletic, so foundations for a new classification are discussed. Biology appears potentially more informative than morphology, as illustrated by the elucidation of a clade of plant gall associates and a clade of taxa with planidial first-instar larvae. The phylogeny suggests a shift from smaller soft-bodied wasps to larger and more heavily sclerotized wasps. Deep divergences in Chalcidoidea coincide with an increase in insect families in the fossil record, and an early shift to phytophagy corresponds with the beginning of the “Angiosperm Terrestrial Revolution”. Our dating analyses suggest a Middle Jurassic origin of 174 Ma (167.3-180.5 Ma) and a crown age of 162.2 Ma (153.9–169.8 Ma) for Chalcidoidea. During the Cretaceous, Chalcidoidea underwent a rapid radiation in southern Gondwana with subsequent dispersals to the Northern Hemisphere. This scenario is discussed with regard to knowledge about host taxa of chalcid wasps, their fossil record, and Earth’s paleogeographic history.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d2603a7ac3a4c5cae9832233cd47b946