1. AFLPs RESOLVE PHYLOGENY AND REVEAL MITOCHONDRIAL INTROGRESSION WITHIN A SPECIES FLOCK OF AFRICAN ELECTRIC FISH (MORMYROIDEA: TELEOSTEI).
- Author
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Sullivan, John P., Lavoué, Sébastien, Arnegard, Matthew E., Hopkins, Carl D., and Ortí, G.
- Subjects
PHYLOGENY ,POLYMORPHISM (Zoology) ,CYTOCHROME b ,ELECTRIC organs in fishes ,FISH physiology ,BIOLOGICAL evolution ,SPECIES hybridization - Abstract
Estimating species phylogeny from a single gene tree can be especially problematic for studies of species flocks in which diversification has been rapid. Here we compare a phylogenetic hypothesis derived from cytochrome b (cyt b) sequences with another based on amplified fragment length polymorphisms (AFLP) for 60 specimens of a monophyletic riverine species flock of mormyrid electric fishes collected in Gabon, west-central Africa. We analyze the aligned cyt b sequences by Wagner parsimony and AFLP data generated from 10 primer combinations using neighbor-joining from a Nei-Li distance matrix, Wagner parsimony, and Dollo parsimony. The different analysis methods yield AFLP tree topologies with few conflicting nodes. Recovered basal relationships in the group are similar between cyt b and AFLP analyses, but differ substantially at many of the more derived nodes. More of the clades recovered with the AFLP characters are consistent with the morphological characters used to designate operational taxonomic units in this group. These results support our hypothesis that the mitochondrial gene tree differs from the overall species phylogeny due at least in part to mitochondrial introgession among lineages. Mapping the two forms of electric organ found in this group onto the AFLP tree suggests that posteriorly innervated electrocytes with nonpenetrating stalks have independently evolved from anteriorly innervated, penetrating-stalk electrocytes at least three times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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