Title: Sciurid phylogeny and the evolution of African ground squirrels
1Sciurid phylogenyand the evolution ofAfrican
ground squirrels
- Matthew D. HerronUniversity of Central Florida
- Department of Biology
2Seminar outline
- Part 1 Sciurid phylogeny
- Higher level evolutionary relationships
- Relationships within the tribe Marmotini
- Taxonomy vs. phylogeny
- Part 2 Evolution of African ground squirrels
- Evolutionary relationships within the tribe
Xerini - Phylogeography of Xerus inauris
3(No Transcript)
4Family Sciuridae(Mammalia Rodentia)
- Tree squirrels Sciurus, Microsciurus,
Tamiasciurus - Flying squirrels Glaucomys, Pteromys
- Chipmunks Tamias
- Ground squirrels Spermophilus, Ammospermophilus
- Prairie dogs Cynomys
- Marmots - Marmota
- African ground squirrels Xerus
5Family Sciuridae
- Widespread all continents except Australia
Antarctica - Conspicuous large, mostly diurnal
- Phylogeny poorly known
6Family Sciuridae
- Wide range of ecological, behavioral and life
history traits - Terrestrial, fossorial, arboreal
- Habitats from tundra to desert
- Solitary to highly social
- Ideal subjects for studies of character evolution
- Several comparative studies of behavioral and
life history traits limited by - Phylogenies based on limited taxonomic sampling
- Taxonomy, rather than phylogeny, used as a basis
for comparison
7Objectives
- To develop hypotheses of the evolutionary history
of the family Sciuridae - Reconstruct the evolutionary history (phylogeny)
of the group - Compare current taxonomy with proposed phylogeny
- A robust phylogeny with extensive taxon sampling
will facilitate analyses of character evolution
8Strategy
- Sequenced the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene
- 1140 base pairs
- Widely used for phylogenetic analyses
- Large number of sequences available
9Methods
- Extract DNA from hair and tissue samples using
phenol/chloroform - PCR and sequence mt cyt-b gene (1140 bp)
10Taxon sampling
- Available sequences were downloaded from GenBank
- Two novel sequences (Xerus inauris, X. rutilus)
were generated for this study - Taxon sampling
- 114 species in 21 genera
- Multiple individuals included when available
- Multiple named subspecies included when available
- Total of 169 OTUs
11Analyses
- Sequences were aligned in GeneDoc
- Maximum parsimony analyses in PAUP
- Smallest number of mutational steps
- Nodal support assessed with 300 bootstrap
pseudoreplicates (BS) - Bayesian analyses in MrBayes
- Model-based approach
- Nodal support assessed with Bayesian posterior
probabilities (BPP)
12Results ofphylogenetic analyses
13Outgroups
99
Sciurillus
Xerini
93
Callosciurus
Tamiasciurus
98
Sciurus
60
Flying squirrels
Results Bayesian phylogram for the Sciuridae
70
99
Tamiini
99
76
100
100
Marmotini
10 Changes
14Differences among studies
Sciurillus
Sciurillus
Sciurillus
Sciurini/ Pteromyinae
Sciurini/ Pteromyinae
Xerini
Xerini
Callosciurini
Xerini
Sciurini/ Pteromyinae
Callosciurini
Callosciurini
Mercer Roth 2003 2659 nuclear mt bp 54
species in 50 genera
Steppan, et al. in press 4500 nuclear bp 34
species in 24 genera
Herron, et al. in press 1140 mt bp 114 species
in 21 genera
15Outgroups
99
Sciurillus
Xerini
93
Callosciurus
Tamiasciurus
98
Sciurus
60
Flying squirrels
Results Bayesian phylogram for the Sciuridae
70
99
Tamiini
99
76
100
100
Marmotini
10 Changes
16100
Tamiasciurus
100
100
78
Sciurus
100
92
Microsciurus
Pteromys
99
Petaurista
Belomys
Hylopetes
Petinomys
Glaucomys
10 Changes
Tree squirrels flying squirrels
17Eutamias
72
Tamias
100
100
Neotamias
Chipmunks
10 Changes
18Summary
- Flying squirrels are monophyletic, sister to tree
squirrels - Sciurillus phylogenetic position does not agree
with taxonomy - Sciurus is paraphyletic with respect to
Microsciurus
19Outgroups
99
Sciurillus
Xerini
93
Callosciurus
Tamiasciurus
98
Sciurus
60
Flying squirrels
Results Bayesian phylogram for the Sciuridae
70
99
Tamiini
99
76
100
100
Marmotini
10 Changes
20Tribe Marmotini
Spermophilus
Marmota
Ammospermophilus
Cynomys
21Tribe Marmotini
- gt60 species in 4 genera
- Holarctic distribution
- Europe east of the Alps
- Asia
- North America
2290
Ammospermophilus
85
100
Cynomys
100
100
100
Marmota
10 Changes
23Ground Squirrels
100
Poliocitellus
100
100
Xerospermophilus
87
100
Callospermophilus
88
10 Changes
24100
60
Otospermophilus
Ground Squirrels
99
52
Ammospermophilus
100
Otospermophilus
100
92
88
Callospermophilus
10 Changes
25Ground Squirrels
New World
99
90
Spermophilus
S. undulatus
100
92
Old World
Spermophilus
10 Changes
26Ground Squirrels
100
Ictidomys
98
100
54
94
57
100
Ictidomys
100
10 Changes
27Summary - Marmotini
- Cynomys, Marmota, Ammospermophilus monophyletic
- Spermophilus paraphyletic w/ respect to
- Ammospermophilus
- Cynomys
- Marmota
- Diphyletic Spermophilus subgenera
- Spermophilus
- Ictidomys
- Otospermophilus
28Conclusions Part 1
- Sciurid taxonomy has problems at all levels
- Subfamily designations are not phylogenetically
informative - Sciurillus does not belong in tribe Sciurini
- Sciurus is paraphyletic with respect to
Microsciurus - Spermophilus is polyphyletic
- Genus, subgenera and even some species have
multiple origins - Elevating subgenera will not resolve
29Xerini - differences among studies
Sciurillus
Sciurillus
Sciurillus
Sciurini/ Pteromyinae
Sciurini/ Pteromyinae
Xerini
Xerini
Callosciurini
Xerini
Sciurini/ Pteromyinae
Callosciurini
Callosciurini
Mercer Roth 2003
Steppan, et al. in press
Herron, et al. in press
30Atlantoxerus
Spermophilopsis
X. erythropus
X. rutilus
X. princeps
X. inauris
31Xerine phylogeny background
Spermophilopsis
- Intergeneric relationships based on DNA sequence
data
Atlantoxerus
Xerus
32Xerine phylogeny background
X. rutilus
- Xerus relationships based on skull and dental
morphology
X. erythropus
X. inauris
X. princeps
33Are X. inauris X. princeps specifically
distinct?
Xerus inauris
Xerus princeps
34Are X. inauris X. princeps distinct species?
- Behavioral differences
- X. inauris is highly social
- Both male and female social groups
- X. princeps is essentially asocial
35Objectives
- Infer phylogenetic hypotheses for the four
recognized species of Xerus - Estimate historical biogeographic patterns
leading to current distributions of Xerus species - Establish roles of gene flow and climate change
in the phylogeographic history of X. inauris - Assess the validity of the specific distinction
between X. inauris and X. princeps
36Methods
- Extract DNA from hair and tissue samples using
phenol/chloroform - PCR and sequence mt cyt-b gene (1140 bp)
37Taxon sampling
- cyt b sequences obtained for
- 3 X. erythropus
- 66 X. inauris
- 9 X. princeps
- 2 X. rutilus
- Spermophilopsis leptodactylus used as outgroup in
all phylogenetic analyses
38Analyses
- Sequences were aligned in GeneDoc
- Bayesian analysis in MrBayes
- Nodal support assessed with Bayesian posterior
probabilities - Maximum parsimony analysis in PAUP
- Nodal support assessed with 500 bootstrap
pseudoreplicates
39Spermophilopsis leptodactylus
100
Xerus erythropus
100
90
X. rutilus
100
100
75
X. princeps
100
59
100
100
99
100
Results Bayesian phylogram of Xerus
X. inauris
5 changes
40Biogeography of Africa
- Well-known pattern of plant disjunctions between
the Horn of Africa and the Cape of Good Hope - Hypothesized arid corridor from eastern to
southern Africa - Southern Africa climate change in the Pliocene
and Pleistocene - Several wet-dry cycles
- Temperature change due to glaciation
41X. rutilus
X. erythropus
X. princeps
X. inauris
42Spermophilopsis leptodactylus
Xerus erythropus
Xerus rutilus
X. princeps
I
Genetic structure of X. inauris X. princeps
II
X. inauris
I
III
III
II
43Methods nested clade analysis
- Haplotype network reconstructed with parsimony
criterion in TCS - Similar haplotypes hierarchically nested into
progressively older and larger clades - Clades tested for associations with geographic
distance in GeoDis - Used to infer historical processes leading to
present distributions
44Xerus inauris nested cladogram
45Results of NCA
- Restricted gene flow with isolation by distance
(IBD) inferred for older clades - IBD for a maternally inherited marker is
congruent with X. inauris social system (female
philopatry) - Suggests xeric conditions were widespread early
in the species history
46Results of NCA
- Habitat fragmentation inferred for one more
recent clade - Suggests interruption of continuous arid
conditions - Congruent with wet-dry cycles in the Late
Pliocene and Pleistocene - Southern Africa is low in elevation, so small
changes in precipitation would cause large
changes in vegetation
47Biogeographic summary
- Xeric conditions widespread in southern Africa
early in X. inauris evolution - Xeric conditions interrupted by Plio-Pleistocene
wet-dry cycles - Arid corridor from Horn of Africa to Cape of
Good Hope lasted at least until the Early
Pleistocene
48Species status
- X. inauris, X. princeps are well supported,
reciprocally monophyletic clades - Highest sequence divergence within taxa (4) is
less than lowest divergence between taxa (6) - Sympatric ranges, overlapping habitats
- Suggests that reproductive isolation results from
factors other than geography
49Other differences betweenX. inauris and X.
princeps
- Single heterochromatic difference in one
autosomal chromosome pair - Differences in thermoregulation and urine and
fecal content - Minor differences in skull morphology
50Summary
- Higher-level taxonomy of squirrels needs revision
- Spermophilus is polyphyletic
- Sciurus paraphyletic with respect to Microsciurus
- Sciurillus basal to remaining sciurids
- Flying squirrels monophyletic, sister to tree
squirrels
51Acknowledgments
- Dr. Chris Parkinson
- Dr. Jane Waterman
- Dr. Franklin Snelson
- Dr. James Roth
- Todd Castoe
- Dr. John Fauth
- Dr. Walter Sotero
- Beryl Wilson
- Jo Newman
- Dr. Tatsuo Oshida
- Dr. Eileen Lacey
- Dr. Mary Denver
- Sue McLaren