Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California, United States of America ; Department of Biology, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Nov 13;8(11):e79935. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079935. eCollection 2013.
The ancient and diverse, yet understudied arthropod class Diplopoda, the millipedes, has a muddled taxonomic history. Despite having a cosmopolitan distribution and a number of unique and interesting characteristics, the group has received relatively little attention; interest in millipede systematics is low compared to taxa of comparable diversity. The existing classification of the group comprises 16 orders. Past attempts to reconstruct millipede phylogenies have suffered from a paucity of characters and included too few taxa to confidently resolve relationships and make formal nomenclatural changes. Herein, we reconstruct an ordinal-level phylogeny for the class Diplopoda using the largest character set ever assembled for the group.
Transcriptomic sequences were obtained from exemplar taxa representing much of the diversity of millipede orders using second-generation (i.e., next-generation or high-throughput) sequencing. These data were subject to rigorous orthology selection and phylogenetic dataset optimization and then used to reconstruct phylogenies employing Bayesian inference and maximum likelihood optimality criteria. Ancestral reconstructions of sperm transfer appendage development (gonopods), presence of lateral defense secretion pores (ozopores), and presence of spinnerets were considered. The timings of major millipede lineage divergence points were estimated.
The resulting phylogeny differed from the existing classifications in a number of fundamental ways. Our phylogeny includes a grouping that has never been described (Juliformia+Merocheta+Stemmiulida), and the ancestral reconstructions suggest caution with respect to using spinnerets as a unifying characteristic for the Nematophora. Our results are shown to have significantly stronger support than previous hypotheses given our data. Our efforts represent the first step toward obtaining a well-supported and robust phylogeny of the Diplopoda that can be used to answer many questions concerning the evolution of this ancient and diverse animal group.
古老而多样的节肢动物门多足纲,即千足虫,其分类历史较为混乱。尽管该类群分布广泛,具有许多独特而有趣的特征,但相对于具有相当多样性的分类群来说,它们受到的关注相对较少;对千足虫系统发育的兴趣也较低。该组现有的分类包括 16 个目。过去重建千足虫系统发育的尝试受到特征不足的影响,包括太少的分类群,无法自信地解决关系并进行正式的命名法变更。在此,我们使用有史以来为该类群收集的最大特征集,重建了多足纲的一个科级水平的系统发育。
使用第二代(即下一代或高通量)测序,从代表千足虫目多样性的典型分类群中获得转录组序列。这些数据经过严格的同源选择和系统发育数据集优化,然后用于使用贝叶斯推断和最大似然最优性标准重建系统发育。考虑了精子转移附属物发育(生殖肢)、侧部防御分泌孔(气孔)和纺器存在的祖先重建。估计了主要千足虫谱系分歧点的时间。
所得的系统发育与现有的分类学在许多基本方面存在差异。我们的系统发育包括一个从未被描述过的分组(Juliformia+Merocheta+Stemmiulida),并且祖先重建表明,在将纺器作为 Nematophora 的统一特征使用时需要谨慎。与之前的假设相比,我们的结果显示出更强的支持,因为我们的数据。我们的努力是朝着获得多足纲的支持良好且稳健的系统发育迈出的第一步,该系统发育可以用于回答有关这个古老而多样的动物群进化的许多问题。