4.6 Article

Ontogeny discombobulates phylogeny: Paedomorphosis and higher-level salamander relationships

Journal

SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 1, Pages 91-110

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1080/10635150590906037

Keywords

amphibians; development; heterochrony; morphology; ontogeny, paedomorphosis; phylogeny; salamanders

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Evolutionary developmental biology (evo-devo) has revolutionized evolutionary biology but has had relatively little impact on systematics. We show that similar large-scale developmental changes in distantly related lineages can dramatically mislead phylogenetic analyses based on morphological data. Salamanders are important model systems in many fields of biology and are of special interest in that many species are paedomorphic and thus never complete metamorphosis. A recent study of higher-level salamander phylogeny placed most paeclomorphic families in a single clade based on morphological data. Here, we use new molecular and morphological data to show that this result most likely was caused by the misleading effects of paedomorphosis. We also provide a well-supported estimate of higher-level salamander relationships based on combined molecular and morphological data. Many authors have suggested that paedomorphosis may be problematic in studies of salamander phylogeny, but this hypothesis has never been tested with a rigorous phylogenetic analysis. We find that the misleading effects of paedomorphosis on phylogenetic analysis go beyond the sharing of hormoplastic larval traits by paeclomorphic adults, and the problem therefore is not solved by simply excluding suspected paedomorphic characters. Instead, two additional factors are critically important in causing paedomorphic species to be phylogenetically misplaced: (1) the absence of clade-specific synapornorphies that develop during metamorphosis in nonpaeclomorphic taxa and allow their correct placement and (2) parallel adaptive changes associated with the aquatic habitat of the larval stage. Our results suggest that the effects of paedomorphosis on phylogenetic analyses may be complex, difficult to detect, and can lead to results that are both wrong and statistically well supported by parsimony and Bayesian analyses.

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