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Arachnid monophyly: Morphological, palaeontological and molecular support for a single terrestrialization within Chelicerata.
Howard, Richard J; Puttick, Mark N; Edgecombe, Gregory D; Lozano-Fernandez, Jesus.
Afiliação
  • Howard RJ; Department of Biosciences, University of Exeter, Penryn Campus, UK; Department of Earth Sciences, The Natural History Museum, UK. Electronic address: r.howard@exeter.ac.uk.
  • Puttick MN; School of Biochemistry & Biological Sciences, University of Bath, Bath, UK.
  • Edgecombe GD; Department of Earth Sciences, The Natural History Museum, UK.
  • Lozano-Fernandez J; Institute of Evolutionary Biology (CSIC-UPF), Barcelona, Spain; School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK. Electronic address: jesus.lozano@ibe.upf-csic.es.
Arthropod Struct Dev ; 59: 100997, 2020 Nov.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33039753
ABSTRACT
The majority of extant arachnids are terrestrial, but other chelicerates are generally aquatic, including horseshoe crabs, sea spiders, and the extinct eurypterids. It is necessary to determine whether arachnids are exclusively descended from a single common ancestor (monophyly), because only that relationship is compatible with one land colonisation in chelicerate evolutionary history. Some studies have cast doubt on arachnid monophyly and recast the origins of their terrestrialization. These include some phylogenomic analyses placing horseshoe crabs within Arachnida, and from aquatic Palaeozoic stem-group scorpions. Here, we evaluate the possibility of arachnid monophyly by considering morphology, fossils and molecules holistically. We argue arachnid monophyly obviates the need to posit reacquisition/retention of aquatic characters such as gnathobasic feeding and book gills without trabeculae from terrestrial ancestors in horseshoe crabs, and that the scorpion total-group contains few aquatic taxa. We built a matrix composed of 200 slowly-evolving genes and re-analysed two published molecular datasets. We retrieved arachnid monophyly where other studies did not - highlighting the difficulty of resolving chelicerate relationships from current molecular data. As such, we consider arachnid monophyly the best-supported hypothesis. Finally, we inferred that arachnids terrestrialized during the Cambrian-Ordovician using the slow-evolving molecular matrix, in agreement with recent analyses.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Aracnídeos / Filogenia / Evolução Biológica Limite: Animals Idioma: En Revista: Arthropod Struct Dev Assunto da revista: BIOLOGIA Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Aracnídeos / Filogenia / Evolução Biológica Limite: Animals Idioma: En Revista: Arthropod Struct Dev Assunto da revista: BIOLOGIA Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Article