Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, University of Münster, Hüfferstraße 1, 48149 Münster, Germany; Institute of Zoology, University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Bünteweg 17, 30559 Hannover, Germany.
School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 427 E Tyler Mall, Tempe, AZ 85287-1501, USA; Beta Hatch Inc., 200 Titchenal Road, Cashmere, WA 98815, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2021 Feb;155:107036. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2020.107036. Epub 2020 Dec 3.
The New World ant genus Myrmecocystus Wesmael, 1838 (Formicidae: Formicinae: Lasiini) is endemic to arid and semi-arid habitats of the western United States and Mexico. Several intriguing life history traits have been described for the genus, the best-known of which are replete workers, that store liquified food in their largely expanded crops and are colloquially referred to as "honeypots". Despite their interesting biology and ecological importance for arid ecosystems, the evolutionary history of Myrmecocystus ants is largely unknown and the current taxonomy presents an unsatisfactory systematic framework. We use ultraconserved elements to infer the evolutionary history of Myrmecocystus ants and provide a comprehensive, dated phylogenetic framework that clarifies the molecular systematics within the genus with high statistical support, reveals cryptic diversity, and reconstructs ancestral foraging activity. Using maximum likelihood, Bayesian and species tree approaches on a data set of 134 ingroup specimens (including samples from natural history collections and type material), we recover largely identical topologies that leave the position of only few clades uncertain and cover the intra- and interspecific variation of 28 of the 29 described and six undescribed species. In addition to traditional support values, such as bootstrap and posterior probability, we quantify genealogical concordance to estimate the effects of conflicting evolutionary histories on phylogenetic inference. Our analyses reveal that the current taxonomic classification of the genus is inconsistent with the molecular phylogenetic inference, and we identify cryptic diversity in seven species. Divergence dating suggests that the split between Myrmecocystus and its sister taxon Lasius occurred in the early Miocene. Crown group Myrmecocystus started diversifying about 14.08 Ma ago when the gradual aridification of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico led to formation of the American deserts and to adaptive radiations of many desert taxa.
新世界蚁属 Myrmecocystus Wesmael, 1838(蚁科:蚁科:Lasiini)是美国西部和墨西哥干旱和半干旱栖息地的特有种。该属已描述了几个有趣的生活史特征,其中最著名的是充满液体食物的充实工蚁,它们将液体食物储存在其大部分扩张的作物中,俗称“蜜罐”。尽管它们具有有趣的生物学和对干旱生态系统的重要生态意义,但新世界蚁属的进化历史在很大程度上是未知的,当前的分类法呈现出令人不满意的系统框架。我们使用超保守元件来推断新世界蚁属蚂蚁的进化历史,并提供一个全面的、有日期的系统发育框架,该框架以高统计支持澄清了属内的分子系统发育,揭示了隐藏的多样性,并重建了祖先的觅食活动。使用最大似然法、贝叶斯法和种系发生树方法对 134 个内群标本(包括自然历史收藏和模式标本的样本)数据集进行分析,我们恢复了基本相同的拓扑结构,只有少数几个分支的位置不确定,并涵盖了 29 个已描述和 6 个未描述物种的 28 个种内和种间变异。除了传统的支持值,如bootstrap 和后验概率,我们还量化了系统发育一致性,以估计冲突进化历史对系统发育推断的影响。我们的分析表明,该属的当前分类与分子系统发育推断不一致,并且我们在七个物种中发现了隐藏的多样性。分化时间估计表明,新世界蚁属与其姐妹类群 Lasius 的分化发生在早中新世。冠群新世界蚁属大约在 14.08 万年前开始多样化,当时美国西南部和墨西哥北部的逐渐干旱化导致了美洲沙漠的形成,并导致了许多沙漠类群的适应性辐射。