4.7 Article

A multi-locus phylogeny suggests an ancient hybridization event between Campephilus and melanerpine woodpeckers (Ayes: Picidae)

期刊

MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
卷 67, 期 3, 页码 578-588

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2013.02.014

关键词

Campephilus; Gene tree; Hybridization; Introgression; Phylogeny; Species tree

资金

  1. Plan Pluriformation 'Etat et structure phylogenetique de la biodiversite actuelle et fossile'
  2. Consortium National de Recherche en Genomique
  3. 'Service de Systematique Moleculaire' of the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle [IFR 101]
  4. Genoscope [2005/67]
  5. Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle [2005/67]
  6. Swedish Research Council [621-2004-2913]
  7. European Community-Research Infrastructure Action under the FP6 Structuring the European Research Area Programme [SE-TAF-746]
  8. NSF [DMS-1222745]
  9. DST/NRF Centre of Excellence at the Percy FitzPatrick Institute

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The ever increasing number of analysed loci in phylogenetics has not only allowed resolution of some parts of the Tree of Life but has also highlighted parts of the tree where incongruent signals among loci were detected. Previous molecular studies suggested conflicting relationships for the New World genus Campephilus, being either associated to the Megapicini or Dendropocini. Yet, the limited number of analysed loci and the use of the concatenation approach to reconstruct the phylogeny prevented the disentanglement of lineage sorting and introgression as causal explanation of this topological conflict. We sequenced four mitochondrial, nine autosomal and three Z-linked loci and used a method that incorporates population level processes into the phylogenetic framework to understand which process (lineage sorting of genetic polymorphism or hybridization/introgression) best explains this conflict. Our analyses revealed that the autosomal FGB intron-7 and to a lesser extent the Z-linked loci have a different phylogenetic history from the mitochondrial loci and some other nuclear loci we analysed. We suggest that this conflicting pattern is the result of introgression consecutive to a hybridization event at the time when members of the Campephilus and melanerpine (Melanerpes and Sphyrapicus) lineages colonized the New World. The case of Cam pephilus highlights that the mitochondrial genome does not always carry the 'wrong' phylogenetic signal after a past hybridization event. Indeed, we here emphasise that the signature of such event can also be detected in the nuclear genome. With the ongoing increase in the number of loci analysed in phylogenetic studies, it is very likely that further cases will be discovered. Our current results indicate that (1) the genus Cam pephilus is related to the Asian genera Blythipicus, Chrysocolaptes and Reinwardtipicus, in accordance with morphological data and (2) that the nuclear genome of Campephilus is likely the mixture of two unrelated lineages. Yet, further work with a denser sampling of loci is necessary to evaluate the extant of the Sphyrapicus/Melanerpes lineage nuclear genome that introgressed into the Campephilus genome. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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