American Museum of Natural History, Division of Vertebrate Zoology, Department of Mammalogy, Central Park West at 79th Street, New York, NY 10024, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2011 Sep 30;11:281. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-281.
The family Pteropodidae comprises bats commonly known as megabats or Old World fruit bats. Molecular phylogenetic studies of pteropodids have provided considerable insight into intrafamilial relationships, but these studies have included only a fraction of the extant diversity (a maximum of 26 out of the 46 currently recognized genera) and have failed to resolve deep relationships among internal clades. Here we readdress the systematics of pteropodids by applying a strategy to try to resolve ancient relationships within Pteropodidae, while providing further insight into subgroup membership, by 1) increasing the taxonomic sample to 42 genera; 2) increasing the number of characters (to >8,000 bp) and nuclear genomic representation; 3) minimizing missing data; 4) controlling for sequence bias; and 5) using appropriate data partitioning and models of sequence evolution.
Our analyses recovered six principal clades and one additional independent lineage (consisting of a single genus) within Pteropodidae. Reciprocal monophyly of these groups was highly supported and generally congruent among the different methods and datasets used. Likewise, most relationships within these principal clades were well resolved and statistically supported. Relationships among the 7 principal groups, however, were poorly supported in all analyses. This result could not be explained by any detectable systematic bias in the data or incongruence among loci. The SOWH test confirmed that basal branches' lengths were not different from zero, which points to closely-spaced cladogenesis as the most likely explanation for the poor resolution of the deep pteropodid relationships. Simulations suggest that an increase in the amount of sequence data is likely to solve this problem.
The phylogenetic hypothesis generated here provides a robust framework for a revised cladistic classification of Pteropodidae into subfamilies and tribes and will greatly contribute to the understanding of character evolution and biogeography of pteropodids. The inability of our data to resolve the deepest relationships of the major pteropodid lineages suggests an explosive diversification soon after origin of the crown pteropodids. Several characteristics of pteropodids are consistent with this conclusion, including high species diversity, great morphological diversity, and presence of key innovations in relation to their sister group.
翼手目蝙蝠科包括通常被称为大蝙蝠或旧大陆果蝠的蝙蝠。对翼手目的分子系统发育研究为家族内的关系提供了相当大的见解,但这些研究只包括现存多样性的一小部分(最多 46 个公认属中的 26 个),并且未能解决内部分支之间的深系关系。在这里,我们通过应用一种策略来重新解决翼手目的系统发生问题,同时通过以下方式进一步深入了解亚群成员关系:1)将分类群样本增加到 42 个属;2)增加特征数量(>8000bp)和核基因组代表;3)最小化缺失数据;4)控制序列偏差;5)使用适当的数据分区和序列进化模型。
我们的分析在翼手目中恢复了六个主要分支和一个额外的独立谱系(由一个单独的属组成)。这些组的相互单系性得到了高度支持,并且在使用的不同方法和数据集之间基本一致。同样,这些主要分支内的大多数关系也得到了很好的解决和统计学支持。然而,在所有分析中,7 个主要群体之间的关系支持度都很差。这一结果不能用数据中的任何可检测系统偏差或基因座之间的不一致来解释。SOWH 测试证实,基干分支的长度与零没有区别,这表明亲缘关系密切的分支发生是翼手目关系分辨率差的最可能解释。模拟表明,增加序列数据量可能会解决这个问题。
这里生成的系统发育假说为翼手目蝙蝠科的修订分类提供了一个稳健的框架,分为亚科和部落,并将极大地促进对翼手目蝙蝠进化和生物地理学的理解。我们的数据无法解决主要翼手目谱系最深处的关系表明,在冠翼手目起源后不久就出现了爆炸性的多样化。翼手目的几个特征与这一结论一致,包括物种多样性高、形态多样性大,以及与姐妹群相关的关键创新。