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Are fleas highly modified Mecoptera? Phylogenomic resolution of Antliophora (Insecta: Holometabola)

Authors :
Frank Friedrich
Hlinka O
Shanlin Liu
Bui Quang Minh
Daniela Bartel
Bernhard Misof
Alexander Donath
Seunggwan Shin
Malte Petersen
Rolf G. Beutel
Michelle D. Trautwein
Oliver Niehuis
David K. Yeates
Christoph Mayer
Benoit Morel
Keith M. Bayless
Brian M. Wiegmann
Lars Podsiadlowski
Alexey M. Kozlov
Simon J. Grove
Karen Meusemann
Peters R
Xin Zhou
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Insect orders have been defined and stable for decades, with few notable exceptions (e.g., Blattodea and Psocoptera). One of the few remaining questions of order-level monophyly is that of Mecoptera in respect to the phylogenetic placement of Siphonaptera (fleas). We used a large set of transcriptomic nucleotide sequence data representing 56 species and more than 3,000 single-copy genes to resolve the evolutionary history of Antliophora, including fleas (Siphonaptera), scorpionflies and relatives (Mecoptera), and true flies (Diptera). We find that fleas and mecopterans together are the sister group of flies. However, our data and/or analyses are unable to distinguish whether fleas are sister to a monophyletic Mecoptera, or whether they arose from within extant mecopteran families, rendering Mecoptera paraphyletic. We did not detect parameter bias in our dataset after applying a broad range of detection methods. Counter to a previous hypothesis that placed fleas within Mecoptera as the sister group to wingless boreids (snow fleas), we found a potential sister group relationship between fleas and the enigmatic family Nannochoristidae. Although we lack conclusive evidence, it seems possible that fleas represent the most-species rich group of modern mecopterans and that their parasitic lifestyle and morphological adaptations have simply made them unrecognizable in respect to their order-level classification.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bf6683f4fee43611f83fe7f5e2d3cc32