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Title

Fast speciations and slow genes: uncovering the root of living canids.

Authors

Lamarca, Alessandra P; Schrago, Carlos G

Abstract

Despite ongoing efforts relying on computationally intensive tree-building methods and large datasets, the deeper phylogenetic relationships between living canid genera remain controversial. We demonstrate that this issue arises fundamentally from the uncertainty of root placement as a consequence of the short length of the branch connecting the major canid clades, which probably resulted from a fast radiation during the early diversification of extant Canidae. Using both nuclear and mitochondrial genes, we investigate the position of the canid root and its consistency by using three rooting methods. We find that mitochondrial genomes consistently retrieve a root node separating the tribe Canini from the remaining canids, whereas nuclear data mostly recover a root that places the Urocyon foxes as the sister lineage of living canids. We demonstrate that, to resolve the canid root, the nuclear segments sequenced so far are significantly less informative than mitochondrial genomes. We also propose that short intervals between speciations obscure the place of the true root, because methods are susceptible to stochastic error in the presence of short internal branches near the root.

Subjects

FOXES; GENES; CANIDAE; GENOMES; RADIATION; MITOCHONDRIAL DNA abnormalities

Publication

Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2020, Vol 129, Issue 2, p492

ISSN

0024-4066

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1093/biolinnean/blz181

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