Literature DB >> 24256520

Turtle origins: insights from phylogenetic retrofitting and molecular scaffolds.

M S Y Lee1.   

Abstract

Adding new taxa to morphological phylogenetic analyses without substantially revising the set of included characters is a common practice, with drawbacks (undersampling of relevant characters) and potential benefits (character selection is not biased by preconceptions over the affinities of the 'retrofitted' taxon). Retrofitting turtles (Testudines) and other taxa to recent reptile phylogenies consistently places turtles with anapsid-grade parareptiles (especially Eunotosaurus and/or pareiasauromorphs), under both Bayesian and parsimony analyses. This morphological evidence for turtle-parareptile affinities appears to contradict the robust genomic evidence that extant (living) turtles are nested within diapsids as sister to extant archosaurs (birds and crocodilians). However, the morphological data are almost equally consistent with a turtle-archosaur clade: enforcing this molecular scaffold onto the morphological data does not greatly increase tree length (parsimony) or reduce likelihood (Bayesian inference). Moreover, under certain analytic conditions, Eunotosaurus groups with turtles and thus also falls within the turtle-archosaur clade. This result raises the possibility that turtles could simultaneously be most closely related to a taxon traditionally considered a parareptile (Eunotosaurus) and still have archosaurs as their closest extant sister group.
© 2013 The Author. Journal of Evolutionary Biology © 2013 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Archosauria; Bayesian inference; Diapsida; Parareptilia; Testudines; amphibians and reptiles; molecular scaffold; morphological evolution; parsimony; phylogenetics

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24256520     DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12268

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Evol Biol        ISSN: 1010-061X            Impact factor:   2.411


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