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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Inferring the evolutionary history of a group of species can be challenging given
the many factors involved. In recent years, the increased availability of sequences
of multiple genes per species has spurred the development of new methodologies
to analyse multilocus data sets. Two approaches that analyse such data are concatenated
supermatrix and coalescent-based species-tree analyses. In this study, we used
both of these methods to infer the phylogenetic relationships of Iberian species of
the genus Squalius from one mitochondrial and six nuclear genes. We found mitonuclear
discordance in the phylogenetic relationships of the group. According to
the mitochondrial gene analysis, all species were recovered as monophyletic except
S. pyrenaicus; besides, in the concatenated supermatrix analysis of the nuclear markers,
this species resolved as polyphyletic with three divergent evolutionary lineages.
The coalescent-based nuclear species-tree analysis rendered a well-resolved phylogeny
compared with the supermatrix analysis, which was unable to discern between
S. carolitertii, S. castellanus and one of the evolutionary lineages of S. pyrenaicus.
This result is likely due to the better integration of population uncertainty in the coalescent
approach. Furthermore, Bayesian multilocus species delimitation analyses
based on a BPP approach strongly supported the distinct nuclear lineages as different
species. Nevertheless, the supermatrix analysis was able to obtain well-supported
relationships in the divergent lineages with low numbers of individuals. Our study
highlights the usefulness of different analytical methodologies to obtain a more complete
picture of the evolutionary history of taxa, especially when discordant patterns
among genes are found.
Description
Keywords
Coalescent species tree Mitonuclear discordance Squalius Supermatrix concatenation
Citation
Zoologica Scripta Doi:10.1111/zsc.12420
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc.