Moore Laboratory of Zoology, Occidental College, Los Angeles, CA 90041, United States.
Red de Biología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ecología A. C., Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2019 Jul;136:29-34. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2019.03.017. Epub 2019 Mar 28.
Natural history collections are increasingly valued as genomic resources. Their specimens reflect the combined efforts of collectors and curators over hundreds of years. For many rare or endangered species, specimens are the only readily available source of DNA. We leveraged specimens from a historical collection to study the evolutionary history of wood-partridges in the genus Dendrortyx. The three Dendrortyx species are found in the highlands of central Mexico and Central America south to Costa Rica. One of these species is endangered, and in general, Dendrortyx are secretive and poorly represented in tissue collections. We extracted DNA from historical museum specimens and sequenced ultraconserved elements (UCEs) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) to assess their phylogeny and divergence times. Phylogenies built from hundreds to thousands of nuclear markers were well resolved and largely congruent with an mtDNA phylogeny. The divergence times revealed an unusually old avian divergence across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in the Pliocene around 3.6 million years ago. Combined with other recent studies, our results challenge the general pattern that highland bird divergences in Mesoamerica are relatively young and influenced by the Pleistocene glacial cycles compared to the older divergences of reptiles and plants, which are thought to overlap more with periods of mountain formation. We also found evidence for monophyletic genetic lineages in mountain ranges within the widespread D. macroura, which should be investigated further with integrative taxonomic methods. Our study demonstrates the power of museum genomics to provide insight into the evolutionary histories of groups where modern samples are lacking.
自然历史收藏越来越被视为基因组资源。它们的标本反映了数百年来采集者和管理者的共同努力。对于许多稀有或濒危物种来说,标本是唯一现成的 DNA 来源。我们利用历史收藏中的标本来研究木鹧鸪属(Dendrortyx)的进化历史。这三个木鹧鸪物种分布在墨西哥中部和中美洲的高地,南至哥斯达黎加。其中一个物种濒临灭绝,而一般来说,木鹧鸪是隐秘的,在组织收藏中代表性不足。我们从历史博物馆标本中提取 DNA,并对超保守元件(UCE)和线粒体 DNA(mtDNA)进行测序,以评估它们的系统发育和分化时间。基于数百到数千个核标记构建的系统发育树得到了很好的解决,并且在很大程度上与 mtDNA 系统发育一致。分化时间揭示了上新世约 360 万年前通过特万特佩克地峡的异常古老的鸟类分化。结合其他最近的研究,我们的结果挑战了这样一种普遍模式,即中美洲高地鸟类的分化相对较年轻,并且受更新世冰川周期的影响,而与爬行动物和植物的较老分化相比,这些分化被认为与山脉形成的时期重叠更多。我们还在广泛分布的 D. macroura 的山脉中发现了单系遗传谱系的证据,这应该通过综合分类学方法进一步研究。我们的研究表明,博物馆基因组学在提供缺乏现代样本的群体的进化历史的见解方面具有强大的力量。