Back to Search Start Over

Phylogeny and classification of Odonata using targeted genomics

Authors :
Melissa Sanchez Herrera
Paul B. Frandsen
Klaas-Douwe B. Dijkstra
Alan R. Lemmon
Jesse W. Breinholt
Emily Moriarty Lemmon
Jeffrey H. Skevington
Jessica L. Ware
Seth M. Bybee
Adolfo Cordero-Rivera
Robert J. Erickson
Vincent J. Kalkman
John C. Abbott
Anton Suvorov
Source :
Investigo. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidade de Vigo, Universidade de Vigo (UVigo)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2021.

Abstract

Dragonflies and damselflies are a charismatic, medium-sized insect order (~6300 species) with a unique potential to approach comparative research questions. Their taxonomy and many ecological traits for a large fraction of extant species are relatively well understood. However, until now, the lack of a large-scale phylogeny based on high throughput data with the potential to connect both perspectives has precluded comparative evolutionary questions for these insects. Here, we provide an ordinal hypothesis of classification based on anchored hybrid enrichment using a total of 136 species representing 46 of the 48 families or incertae sedis, and a total of 478 target loci. Our analyses recovered the monophyly for all three suborders: Anisoptera, Anisozygoptera and Zygoptera. Although the backbone of the topology was reinforced and showed the highest support values to date, our genomic data was unable to stronglyresolve portions of the topology. In addition, a quartet sampling approach highlights the potential evolutionary scenarios that may have shaped evolutionary phylogeny (e.g., incomplete lineage sorting and introgression) of this taxon. Finally, in light of our phylogenomic reconstruction and previous morphological and molecular information we proposed an updated odonate classification and define five new families (Amanipodagrionidae fam. nov., Mesagrionidae fam. nov., Mesopodagrionidae fam. nov., Priscagrionidae fam. nov., Protolestidae fam. nov.) and reinstate another two (Rhipidolestidae stat. res., Tatocnemididae stat. res.). Additionally, we feature the problematic taxonomic groupings for examination in future studies to improve our current phylogenetic hypothesis National Science Foundation | Ref. DEB-1265714 National Science Foundation | Ref. DBI-1564386 Ministerio de Ciencia | Ref. CGL2014-53140-P Ministerio de Ciencia | Ref. PGC2018-096656-B-I00

Details

ISSN :
20145314
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Investigo. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidade de Vigo, Universidade de Vigo (UVigo)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....12a902fce6e3849832e5cd4517b47fe5