期刊
ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA
卷 51, 期 5, 页码 522-532出版社
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/zsc.12553
关键词
diversification rate; Ethiopia; Miocene; molecular phylogeny; savannah rodent
资金
- Russian Academy of Sciences [AAAA-A18-118042490058-8]
- Russian Foundation for Basic Research [19-54-26003]
- Russian Science Foundation [21-14-00007]
- Russian Science Foundation [21-14-00007] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation
Gerbillinae is the second largest subfamily in the Muridae family, consisting of approximately 16 genera and more than 100 species. Through genetic analysis, the phylogenetic placement of Ammodillus, a monotypic genus, has been elucidated for the first time, providing the most complete tribal phylogeny of Gerbillinae to date. The results support Ammodillus as a sister taxon to all other gerbillines and suggest its separation dates back to approximately 11.7 million years ago. The subfamily is divided into four tribes.
Gerbillinae is the second largest subfamily (after Murinae) in the Muridae family comprising similar to 16 genera and more than a hundred species. Phylogenetic relationships among the main taxa of gerbils are still not fully understood. In particular, a major issue is the phylogenetic position of the monotypic genus Ammodillus (endemic to the Horn of Africa), which according to morphological data may be one of the earliest offshoots from the gerbilline stem; however, its precise affiliations have been unknown due to the lack of genetic data. Itere, by means of a multilocus dataset including one mitochondrial and five nuclear markers, we for the first time elucidated phylogenetic placement of Ammodillus and provided the most complete tribal phylogeny of Gerbillinae to date. Phylogenetic reconstructions robustly supported Ammodillus as a sister taxon to all other living gerbillines and suggested that the separation of the ammodile lineage dates back to the Middle/Late Miocene boundary (similar to 11.7 Mya). The results are consistent with subdivision of the subfamily into four tribes: monotypic Ammodillini, Gerbillini (including Taterdlus), Desmodilliscini (including Pachyuromys) and Gerbillurini. In the light of the new data, we discuss possible scenarios of Gerbillinae origin, highlight Ammodillus as a relatively ancient-albeit morphologically advanced-lineage that has never gained diversity and propose the term 'ancient singleton' for a taxon with a persistently low diversification rate.
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