• Welcome to BirdForum, the internet's largest birding community with thousands of members from all over the world. The forums are dedicated to wild birds, birding, binoculars and equipment and all that goes with it.

    Please register for an account to take part in the discussions in the forum, post your pictures in the gallery and more.
ZEISS DTI thermal imaging cameras. For more discoveries at night, and during the day.

Genomic Loci Misrepresent the Phylogeny of an Avian Radiation (1 Viewer)

Fred Ruhe

Well-known member
Netherlands
DEZHI ZHANG, FRANK E. RHEINDT, HUISHANG SHE, YALIN CHENG, GANG SONG, CHENXI JIA, YANHUA QU, PER ALSTRÖM, AND FUMIN LEIm, 2021

Most Genomic Loci Misrepresent the Phylogeny of an Avian Radiation Because of Ancient Gene Flow

Systematic Biology 70(5): 961–975
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syab024

https://watermark.silverchair.com/syab024.pdf?token=AQECAHi208BE49Ooan9kkhW_Ercy7Dm3ZL_9Cf3qfKAc485ysgAAAskwggLFBgkqhkiG9w0BBwagggK2MIICsgIBADCCAqsGCSqGSIb3DQEHATAeBglghkgBZQMEAS4wEQQMVYIGGdmLoY8hMEg5AgEQgIICfJccI9KuZ6fMxrIGIEaxBzwiQW5juVfjCKiA7JXpvx1Sx49snJsQjVYsGQ0y8uj4IquKR225gVPPTxCkXY3Bp2mrjcEG-WVNzwJfKJtc0NInDtzAsQM2FExuP1a_30Fb31usjTboHDn_L8KlvwO8t6epMpzxokw3vW5JULkLWwAT1dgHTcSLktndTuvcRJ6Oi-VqzLWHwoAWfPBy_pVyY0Mie4RJhdKhT5CB5wbQ7OwXe7zfjxfgIcsAfyDZrjKUPszcBCGBHO-lVfe1pWxGZmWHeg1yzi5OJLZSH5qFr7QNCmPhF8x845M2swKadytcaj6rpEZbwGjkZhgYHoaMprDRg9YQ4em_s4lP-vaAi34WOqA0MTx3-VF2F8uHp6UGnlX4hxV7kiEBoGP-hucBYx4RzkTxP6VlNfvhpl-JLd93BSC0F4oYpX3ACQ8fXppAFPK9zIhrsJ12_9OI22heK6CN4PX0UNZEXBXGhuOUiJ4ft4MarGqyxS6QQ1kq_ti23cRKrmQnoNfgFL9wJv1gcKRci5YZJf_aXsCNdVp_UsxcgSFdejObNgWSKoUvKwnA_htw4s-uqlDOSsFnDSa1cec0Leu-KZ3h0iaCksc8jwCjOit1FjVoIhFEc0UH4lWGmx4PO-WrNPphchClUD8qHEfoKKYNdfe9FAroVmBSqJFfbtUmGXImh3zFJaaV4mCaxyndxT5y70ecji74ABaxMQa1Y7P90qPXvVPLkF_AJgKZ81bi1-2jZW5kCzNOpxGZuQaRsqgT5D-vm9R9PJaxzCK2tG2pe-zlkoPwAivIQvOhCiEIqS_WY5RHuu4ojysN3LZNFbgwJ4nu6x3VAA

Abstract.

Phylogenetic trees based on genome-wide sequence data may not always represent the true evolutionary history for a variety of reasons. One process that can lead to incorrect reconstruction of species phylogenies is gene flow, especially if interspecific gene flow has affected large parts of the genome. We investigated phylogenetic relationships within a clade comprising eight species of passerine birds (Phylloscopidae, Phylloscopus, leaf warblers) using one de novo genome assembly and 78 resequenced genomes. On the basis of hypothesis-exclusion trials based on D-statistics, phylogenetic network analysis, and demographic inference analysis, we identified ancient gene flow affecting large parts of the genome between one species and the ancestral lineage of a sister species pair. This ancient gene flow consistently caused erroneous reconstruction of the phylogeny when using large amounts of genome-wide sequence data. In contrast, the true relationships were captured when smaller parts of the genome were analyzed, showing that the “winner-takes-all democratic majority tree” is not necessarily the true species tree. Under this condition, smaller amounts of data may sometimes avoid the effects of gene flow due to stochastic sampling, as hidden reticulation histories are more likely to emerge from the use of larger data sets, especially whole-genome data sets. In addition, we also found that genomic regions affected by ancient gene flow generally exhibited higher genomic differentiation but a lower recombination rate and nucleotide diversity. Our study highlights the importance of considering reticulation in phylogenetic reconstructions in the genomic era.[Bifurcation; introgression; recombination; reticulation; Phylloscopus.]

Free pdf: https://watermark.silverchair.com/s...ivIQvOhCiEIqS_WY5RHuu4ojysN3LZNFbgwJ4nu6x3VAA

Enjoy,

Fred
 
Warning! This thread is more than 3 years ago old.
It's likely that no further discussion is required, in which case we recommend starting a new thread. If however you feel your response is required you can still do so.

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top