4.5 Article

Mitochondrial phylogenomics illuminates the evolutionary history of Neuropterida

期刊

CLADISTICS
卷 33, 期 6, 页码 617-636

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cla.12186

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资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31320103902, 31322051, 31672322, 41271063]
  2. National Key Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) [2013CB127600]
  3. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [5162016]
  4. China Scholarship Council fellowship program [201406350100]
  5. United States National Science Foundation [DEB-1144119]
  6. Division Of Environmental Biology
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences [1144119] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Neuroptera (lacewings) and allied orders Megaloptera (dobsonflies, alderflies) and Raphidioptera (snakeflies) are predatory insects and together make up the clade Neuropterida. The higher-level relationships within Neuropterida have historically been widely disputed with multiple competing hypotheses. Moreover, the evolution of important biological innovations among various Neuropterida families, such as the origin, timing and direction of transitions between aquatic and terrestrial habitats of larvae, remains poorly understood. To investigate the origin and diversification of lacewings and their allies, we undertook phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial genomes of all families of Neuropterida using Bayesian inference, maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony methods. We present a robust, fully resolved phylogeny and divergence time estimation for Neuropterida with strong statistical support for almost all nodes. Mitochondrial sequence data are typified by significant compositional heterogeneity across lineages, and parsimony and models assuming homogeneous rates did not recover Neuroptera as monophyletic. Only a model accounting for compositional heterogeneity (i.e. CAT-GTR) recovered all orders of Neuropterida as monophyletic. Significant findings of the mitogenomic phylogeny include recovering Raphidioptera as sister to Megaloptera plus Neuroptera. The sister family of all other lacewings are the dusty-wings (Coniopterygidae), rather than Nevrorthidae. Nevrorthidae are instead returned to their traditional position as the sister group of the spongilla-flies (Sisyridae) and closely related to Osmylidae. Our divergence time analysis indicates that the Mesozoic was indeed a golden age' for lacewings, with most families of Neuropterida diverging during the Triassic and Jurassic and all extant families present by the Early Cretaceous. Based on ancestral character state reconstructions of larval habitat we evaluate competing hypotheses regarding the life style of early neuropteridan larvae as either aquatic or terrestrial. (C) The Willi Hennig Society 2016.

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