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Habitat-dependent diversification and parallel molecular evolution: Water scavenger beetles as a case study
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作者 ke-qing song Huai-Jun XUE +7 位作者 Rolf G BEUTEL Ming BAI Dong-Ju BIAN Jie LIU Yong-Ying RUAN Wen-Zhu LI Feng-Long JIA Xing-Ke YANG 《Current Zoology》 SCIE CAS CSCD 2014年第5期561-570,共10页
Habitat shift is a key innovation that has contributed to the extreme diversification of insects. Most groups are well-adapted to more or less specific environments and shifts usually only happen between similar habit... Habitat shift is a key innovation that has contributed to the extreme diversification of insects. Most groups are well-adapted to more or less specific environments and shifts usually only happen between similar habitats. To colonize a pro- foundly different habitat type does not only present ecological opportunities but also great challenges. We used Hydrophiloidea (water scavenger beetles) as a system to study transitions between terrestrial and aquatic environments. We estimated the diversi- fication rate of different clades using phylogenetic trees based on a representative taxon sampling and six genes. We also investi- gated possible evolutionary changes in candidate genes following habitat shifts. Our results suggest that the diversification rate is relatively slow (0.039-0.050 sp/My) in the aquatic lineage, whereas it is distinctly increased in the secondarily terrestrial clade (0.055-0.075 sp/My). Our results also show that aquatic species have a G (Glycine) or S (Serine) amino acid at a given site of COI, while terrestrial species share an A (Alanine) amino acid with terrestrial outgroups. This indicates that habitat factors may create selection pressure on the evolution of functional genes and cause homoplasy in molecular evolution [Current Zoology 60 (5): 561-570, 2014 ] 展开更多
关键词 Hydrophiloidea Habitat shift Diversification rate Parallel molecular evolution
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