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An integrative phylogenetic approach for inferring relationships of fossil gobioids (Teleostei: Gobiiformes)

The suborder Gobioidei is among the most diverse groups of vertebrates, comprising about 2310 species. In the fossil record gobioids date back to the early Eocene (c. 50 m.y. ago), and a considerable increase in numbers of described species is evident since the middle Miocene (c. 16 m.y. ago). About...

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Autores principales: Gierl, Christoph, Dohrmann, Martin, Keith, Philippe, Humphreys, William, Esmaeili, Hamid R., Vukić, Jasna, Šanda, Radek, Reichenbacher, Bettina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9269936/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35802740
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271121
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author Gierl, Christoph
Dohrmann, Martin
Keith, Philippe
Humphreys, William
Esmaeili, Hamid R.
Vukić, Jasna
Šanda, Radek
Reichenbacher, Bettina
author_facet Gierl, Christoph
Dohrmann, Martin
Keith, Philippe
Humphreys, William
Esmaeili, Hamid R.
Vukić, Jasna
Šanda, Radek
Reichenbacher, Bettina
author_sort Gierl, Christoph
collection PubMed
description The suborder Gobioidei is among the most diverse groups of vertebrates, comprising about 2310 species. In the fossil record gobioids date back to the early Eocene (c. 50 m.y. ago), and a considerable increase in numbers of described species is evident since the middle Miocene (c. 16 m.y. ago). About 40 skeleton-based gobioid species and > 100 otolith-based species have been described until to date. However, assignment of a fossil gobioid species to specific families has often remained tentative, even if well preserved complete specimens are available. The reasons are that synapomorphies that can be recognized in a fossil skeleton are rare (or absent) and that no phylogenetic framework applicable to gobioid fossils exists. Here we aim to overcome this problem by developing a phylogenetic total evidence framework that is suitable to place a fossil skeleton-based gobioid at family level. Using both literature and newly collected data we assembled a morphological character matrix (48 characters) for 29 extant species, representing all extant gobioid families, and ten fossil gobioid species, and we compiled a multi-gene concatenated alignment (supermatrix; 6271 bp) of published molecular sequence data for the extant species. Bayesian and Maximum Parsimony analyses revealed that our selection of extant species was sufficient to achieve a molecular ‘backbone’ that fully conforms to previous molecular work. Our data revealed that inclusion of all fossil species simultaneously produced very poorly resolved trees, even for some extant taxa. In contrast, addition of a single fossil species to the total evidence data set of the extant species provided new insight in its possible placement at family level, especially in a Bayesian framework. Five out of the ten fossil species were recovered in the same family as had been suggested in previous works based on comparative morphology. The remaining five fossil species had hitherto been left as family incertae sedis. Now, based on our phylogenetic framework, new and mostly well supported hypotheses to which clades they could belong can be presented. We conclude that the total evidence framework presented here will be beneficial for all future work dealing with the phylogenetic placement of a fossil skeleton-based gobioid and thus will help to improve our understanding of the evolutionary history of these fascinating fishes. Moreover, our data highlight that increased sampling of fossil taxa in a total-evidence context is not universally beneficial, as might be expected, but strongly depends on the study group and peculiarities of the morphological data.
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spelling pubmed-92699362022-07-09 An integrative phylogenetic approach for inferring relationships of fossil gobioids (Teleostei: Gobiiformes) Gierl, Christoph Dohrmann, Martin Keith, Philippe Humphreys, William Esmaeili, Hamid R. Vukić, Jasna Šanda, Radek Reichenbacher, Bettina PLoS One Research Article The suborder Gobioidei is among the most diverse groups of vertebrates, comprising about 2310 species. In the fossil record gobioids date back to the early Eocene (c. 50 m.y. ago), and a considerable increase in numbers of described species is evident since the middle Miocene (c. 16 m.y. ago). About 40 skeleton-based gobioid species and > 100 otolith-based species have been described until to date. However, assignment of a fossil gobioid species to specific families has often remained tentative, even if well preserved complete specimens are available. The reasons are that synapomorphies that can be recognized in a fossil skeleton are rare (or absent) and that no phylogenetic framework applicable to gobioid fossils exists. Here we aim to overcome this problem by developing a phylogenetic total evidence framework that is suitable to place a fossil skeleton-based gobioid at family level. Using both literature and newly collected data we assembled a morphological character matrix (48 characters) for 29 extant species, representing all extant gobioid families, and ten fossil gobioid species, and we compiled a multi-gene concatenated alignment (supermatrix; 6271 bp) of published molecular sequence data for the extant species. Bayesian and Maximum Parsimony analyses revealed that our selection of extant species was sufficient to achieve a molecular ‘backbone’ that fully conforms to previous molecular work. Our data revealed that inclusion of all fossil species simultaneously produced very poorly resolved trees, even for some extant taxa. In contrast, addition of a single fossil species to the total evidence data set of the extant species provided new insight in its possible placement at family level, especially in a Bayesian framework. Five out of the ten fossil species were recovered in the same family as had been suggested in previous works based on comparative morphology. The remaining five fossil species had hitherto been left as family incertae sedis. Now, based on our phylogenetic framework, new and mostly well supported hypotheses to which clades they could belong can be presented. We conclude that the total evidence framework presented here will be beneficial for all future work dealing with the phylogenetic placement of a fossil skeleton-based gobioid and thus will help to improve our understanding of the evolutionary history of these fascinating fishes. Moreover, our data highlight that increased sampling of fossil taxa in a total-evidence context is not universally beneficial, as might be expected, but strongly depends on the study group and peculiarities of the morphological data. Public Library of Science 2022-07-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9269936/ /pubmed/35802740 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271121 Text en © 2022 Gierl et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://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
Gierl, Christoph
Dohrmann, Martin
Keith, Philippe
Humphreys, William
Esmaeili, Hamid R.
Vukić, Jasna
Šanda, Radek
Reichenbacher, Bettina
An integrative phylogenetic approach for inferring relationships of fossil gobioids (Teleostei: Gobiiformes)
title An integrative phylogenetic approach for inferring relationships of fossil gobioids (Teleostei: Gobiiformes)
title_full An integrative phylogenetic approach for inferring relationships of fossil gobioids (Teleostei: Gobiiformes)
title_fullStr An integrative phylogenetic approach for inferring relationships of fossil gobioids (Teleostei: Gobiiformes)
title_full_unstemmed An integrative phylogenetic approach for inferring relationships of fossil gobioids (Teleostei: Gobiiformes)
title_short An integrative phylogenetic approach for inferring relationships of fossil gobioids (Teleostei: Gobiiformes)
title_sort integrative phylogenetic approach for inferring relationships of fossil gobioids (teleostei: gobiiformes)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9269936/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35802740
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0271121
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