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Prolonged morphological expansion of spiny-rayed fishes following the end-Cretaceous

Authors :
Ava, Ghezelayagh
Richard C, Harrington
Edward D, Burress
Matthew A, Campbell
Janet C, Buckner
Prosanta, Chakrabarty
Jessica R, Glass
W Tyler, McCraney
Peter J, Unmack
Christine E, Thacker
Michael E, Alfaro
Sarah T, Friedman
William B, Ludt
Peter F, Cowman
Matt, Friedman
Samantha A, Price
Alex, Dornburg
Brant C, Faircloth
Peter C, Wainwright
Thomas J, Near
Source :
Nature ecologyevolution. 6(8)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Spiny-rayed fishes (Acanthomorpha) dominate modern marine habitats and account for more than a quarter of all living vertebrate species. Previous time-calibrated phylogenies and patterns from the fossil record explain this dominance by correlating the origin of major acanthomorph lineages with the Cretaceous-Palaeogene mass extinction. Here we infer a time-calibrated phylogeny using ultraconserved elements that samples 91.4% of all acanthomorph families and investigate patterns of body shape disparity. Our results show that acanthomorph lineages steadily accumulated throughout the Cenozoic and underwent a significant expansion of among-clade morphological disparity several million years after the end-Cretaceous. These acanthomorph lineages radiated into and diversified within distinct regions of morphospace that characterize iconic lineages, including fast-swimming open-ocean predators, laterally compressed reef fishes, bottom-dwelling flatfishes, seahorses and pufferfishes. The evolutionary success of spiny-rayed fishes is the culmination of multiple species-rich and phenotypically disparate lineages independently diversifying across the globe under a wide range of ecological conditions.

Details

ISSN :
2397334X
Volume :
6
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature ecologyevolution
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........0af049004c4ddda48ce9a09a43a1f9e6