Centre for GeoGenetics, Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, Øster Voldgade 5-7, 1350 Copenhagen, Denmark.
BMC Evol Biol. 2011 Mar 10;11:65. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-65.
Previous DNA-based phylogenetic studies of the Delphinidae family suggest it has undergone rapid diversification, as characterised by unresolved and poorly supported taxonomic relationships (polytomies) for some of the species within this group. Using an increased amount of sequence data we test between alternative hypotheses of soft polytomies caused by rapid speciation, slow evolutionary rate and/or insufficient sequence data, and hard polytomies caused by simultaneous speciation within this family. Combining the mitogenome sequences of five new and 12 previously published species within the Delphinidae, we used Bayesian and maximum-likelihood methods to estimate the phylogeny from partitioned and unpartitioned mitogenome sequences. Further ad hoc tests were then conducted to estimate the support for alternative topologies.
We found high support for all the relationships within our reconstructed phylogenies, and topologies were consistent between the Bayesian and maximum-likelihood trees inferred from partitioned and unpartitioned data. Resolved relationships included the placement of the killer whale (Orcinus orca) as sister taxon to the rest of the Globicephalinae subfamily, placement of the Risso's dolphin (Grampus griseus) within the Globicephalinae subfamily, removal of the white-beaked dolphin (Lagenorhynchus albirostris) from the Delphininae subfamily and the placement of the rough-toothed dolphin (Steno bredanensis) as sister taxon to the rest of the Delphininae subfamily rather than within the Globicephalinae subfamily. The additional testing of alternative topologies allowed us to reject all other putative relationships, with the exception that we were unable to reject the hypothesis that the relationship between L. albirostris and the Globicephalinae and Delphininae subfamilies was polytomic.
Despite their rapid diversification, the increased sequence data yielded by mitogenomes enables the resolution of a strongly supported, bifurcating phylogeny, and a chronology of the divergences within the Delphinidae family. This highlights the benefits and potential application of large mitogenome datasets to resolve long-standing phylogenetic uncertainties.
先前基于 DNA 的海豚科系统发生研究表明,该科经历了快速的多样化,其特征是该组内的一些物种的分类关系(并系)未得到解决且支持不足。我们使用更多的序列数据来检验由快速物种形成、进化缓慢和/或序列数据不足引起的软并系与由该科内同时物种形成引起的硬并系的替代假设。我们结合了海豚科内的 5 个新种和 12 个先前发表的物种的线粒体基因组序列,使用贝叶斯和最大似然方法从分区和非分区线粒体基因组序列估计系统发育。然后进行了进一步的特别测试,以估计替代拓扑的支持。
我们发现我们重建的系统发育中的所有关系都得到了高度支持,并且分区和非分区数据推断的贝叶斯和最大似然树的拓扑结构一致。已解决的关系包括虎鲸(Orcinus orca)作为Globicephalinae 亚科其余物种的姐妹分类群的位置、灰海豚(Grampus griseus)在 Globicephalinae 亚科内的位置、白喙海豚(Lagenorhynchus albirostris)从 Delphininae 亚科移除以及糙齿海豚(Steno bredanensis)作为其余 Delphininae 亚科的姐妹分类群而不是 Globicephalinae 亚科内的位置。对替代拓扑结构的额外测试使我们能够拒绝所有其他假定的关系,除了我们无法拒绝 L. albirostris 与 Globicephalinae 和 Delphininae 亚科之间的关系是并系的假设。
尽管它们经历了快速的多样化,但线粒体基因组产生的更多序列数据使我们能够确定一个支持强烈的分支系统发育,并确定海豚科内的分歧时间。这突出了大型线粒体基因组数据集在解决长期存在的系统发育不确定性方面的好处和潜力。