4.8 Article

Newly discovered sister lineage sheds light on early ant evolution

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0806187105

Keywords

biodiversity; Formicidae; long-branch attraction; phylogeny; soil biology

Funding

  1. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF)
  2. Conselho National de Pesquisa e Tecnologia CNPq [BMBF01LT0014/CNPq690018/00-2]
  3. Ernst Mayr Travel Grant in Animal Systematics (Museum of Comparative Zoology)
  4. Green Fund
  5. Hartman Research Fellowship
  6. Graduate Research Fellowship (National Science Foundation)
  7. Donald D. Harrington fellowship

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Ants are the world's most conspicuous and important eusocial insects and their diversity, abundance, and extreme behavioral specializations make them a model system for several disciplines within the biological sciences. Here, we report the discovery of a new ant that appears to represent the sister lineage to all extant ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). The phylogenetic position of this cryptic predator from the soils of the Amazon rainforest was inferred from several nuclear genes, sequenced from a single leg. Martialis heureka (gen. et sp. nov.) also constitutes the sole representative of a new, morphologically distinct subfamily of ants, the Martialinae (subfam. nov.). Our analyses have reduced the likelihood of long-branch attraction artifacts that have troubled previous phylogenetic studies of early-diverging ants and therefore solidify the emerging view that the most basal extant ant lineages are cryptic, hypogaeic foragers. On the basis of morphological and phylogenetic evidence we suggest that these specialized subterranean predators are the sole surviving representatives of a highly divergent lineage that arose near the dawn of ant diversification and have persisted in ecologically stable environments like tropical soils over great spans of time.

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