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The changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant Salamandridae (Amphibia: Urodela)

The phylogenetic relationships among members of the family Salamandridae have been repeatedly investigated over the last 90 years, with changing character and taxon sampling. We review the changing composition and the phylogenetic position of salamandrid genera and species groups and add a new phylo...

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Autores principales: Veith, Michael, Bogaerts, Sergé, Pasmans, Frank, Kieren, Sarah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6070172/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30067741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198237
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author Veith, Michael
Bogaerts, Sergé
Pasmans, Frank
Kieren, Sarah
author_facet Veith, Michael
Bogaerts, Sergé
Pasmans, Frank
Kieren, Sarah
author_sort Veith, Michael
collection PubMed
description The phylogenetic relationships among members of the family Salamandridae have been repeatedly investigated over the last 90 years, with changing character and taxon sampling. We review the changing composition and the phylogenetic position of salamandrid genera and species groups and add a new phylogeny based exclusively on sequences of nuclear genes. Salamandrina often changed its position depending on the characters used. It was included several times in a clade together with the primitive newts (Echinotriton, Pleurodeles, Tylototriton) due to their seemingly ancestral morphology. The latter were often inferred as a monophyletic clade. Respective monophyly was almost consistently established in all molecular studies for true salamanders (Chioglossa, Lyciasalamandra, Mertensiella, Salamandra), modern Asian newts (Cynops, Laotriton, Pachytriton, Paramesotriton) and modern New World newts (Notophthalmus, Taricha). Reciprocal non-monophyly has been established through molecular studies for the European mountain newts (Calotriton, Euproctus) and the modern European newts (Ichthyosaura, Lissotriton, Neurergus, Ommatotriton, Triturus) since Calotriton was identified as the sister lineage of Triturus. In pre-molecular studies, their respective monophyly had almost always been assumed, mainly because a complex courtship behaviour shared by their respective members. Our nuclear tree is nearly identical to a mito-genomic tree, with all but one node being highly supported. The major difference concerns the position of Calotriton, which is no longer nested within the modern European newts. This has implications for the evolution of courtship behaviour of European newts. Within modern European newts, Ichthyosaura and Lissotriton changed their position compared to the mito-genomic tree. Previous molecular trees based on seemingly large nuclear data sets, but analysed together with mitochondrial data, did not reveal monophyly of modern European newts since taxon sampling and nuclear gene coverage was too poor to obtain conclusive results. We therefore conclude that mitochondrial and nuclear data should be analysed on their own.
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spelling pubmed-60701722018-08-09 The changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant Salamandridae (Amphibia: Urodela) Veith, Michael Bogaerts, Sergé Pasmans, Frank Kieren, Sarah PLoS One Research Article The phylogenetic relationships among members of the family Salamandridae have been repeatedly investigated over the last 90 years, with changing character and taxon sampling. We review the changing composition and the phylogenetic position of salamandrid genera and species groups and add a new phylogeny based exclusively on sequences of nuclear genes. Salamandrina often changed its position depending on the characters used. It was included several times in a clade together with the primitive newts (Echinotriton, Pleurodeles, Tylototriton) due to their seemingly ancestral morphology. The latter were often inferred as a monophyletic clade. Respective monophyly was almost consistently established in all molecular studies for true salamanders (Chioglossa, Lyciasalamandra, Mertensiella, Salamandra), modern Asian newts (Cynops, Laotriton, Pachytriton, Paramesotriton) and modern New World newts (Notophthalmus, Taricha). Reciprocal non-monophyly has been established through molecular studies for the European mountain newts (Calotriton, Euproctus) and the modern European newts (Ichthyosaura, Lissotriton, Neurergus, Ommatotriton, Triturus) since Calotriton was identified as the sister lineage of Triturus. In pre-molecular studies, their respective monophyly had almost always been assumed, mainly because a complex courtship behaviour shared by their respective members. Our nuclear tree is nearly identical to a mito-genomic tree, with all but one node being highly supported. The major difference concerns the position of Calotriton, which is no longer nested within the modern European newts. This has implications for the evolution of courtship behaviour of European newts. Within modern European newts, Ichthyosaura and Lissotriton changed their position compared to the mito-genomic tree. Previous molecular trees based on seemingly large nuclear data sets, but analysed together with mitochondrial data, did not reveal monophyly of modern European newts since taxon sampling and nuclear gene coverage was too poor to obtain conclusive results. We therefore conclude that mitochondrial and nuclear data should be analysed on their own. Public Library of Science 2018-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6070172/ /pubmed/30067741 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198237 Text en © 2018 Veith et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Veith, Michael
Bogaerts, Sergé
Pasmans, Frank
Kieren, Sarah
The changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant Salamandridae (Amphibia: Urodela)
title The changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant Salamandridae (Amphibia: Urodela)
title_full The changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant Salamandridae (Amphibia: Urodela)
title_fullStr The changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant Salamandridae (Amphibia: Urodela)
title_full_unstemmed The changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant Salamandridae (Amphibia: Urodela)
title_short The changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant Salamandridae (Amphibia: Urodela)
title_sort changing views on the evolutionary relationships of extant salamandridae (amphibia: urodela)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6070172/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30067741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198237
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