Complex organs such as eyes are commonly lost during evolution, but the timescale on which lost phenotypes could be reactivated is a matter of long-standing debate, with important implications for the molecular mechanisms of trait loss. Two phylogenetic approaches have been used to test whether regain of traits has occurred. One way is by comparison of nested, continuous-time Markov models of trait evolution, approaches that we term tree-based tests. A second way to demonstrate statistical support for trait regain is through use of node-based tests that employ explicit estimation of ancestral node states. Here, we estimate new molecular and morphological phylogenies and use them to examine the possibility of eye regain and dispersal between abyssal and shallow seas during the history of cylindroleberidid ostracods, a family of about 200 species, comprising both eyeless and sighted species. First, we confirmed that eye presence/absence is correlated with habitat depth. Parameter estimates from a phylogenetic model indicate that speciation is more rapid in deep-sea eyeless clades compared with shallow-water sighted clades. In addition, we found that tree-based statistical tests usually indicated reversals, including both transitions from deep to shallow seas and regain of eyes. In contrast, node-based statistical tests usually failed to show significant support for reversals. These results also hold for simulated phylogenies, indicating that they are not unique to the current data set. We recommend that both tree-based and node-based tests should be examined before making conclusions about character reversal and that ideally, alternative character histories should be tested using additional data, besides just the phylogenetic distribution of presence/absence of the characters.
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Syst Parasitol
April 2023
Department of Natural History Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, 060-0810, Japan.
With about 80 species, Sphaeronella is the most species-rich genus in the copepod family Nicothoidae. To date, 20 named Sphaeronella species have been reported as ectoparasites on ostracod crustaceans. Here we describe Sphaeronella uyenoi sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvolution
June 2019
Santa Barbara, Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, California, 93106.
Ecogeographical rules inform our understanding of biodiversity by seeking reliable associations between organismal phenotypes and environmental factors. Reminiscent of classic ecogeographical rules, environmental factors vary in predictable ways with ocean depth, leading to predictions about organismal phenotypes. A valuable group for studying associations between habitat depth and phenotype is cylindroleberidid ostracods (Crustacea) because of previous phylogenetic analyses and their enormous depth range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZootaxa
January 2018
Department of Palaeontology, Eötvös University, H-1117 Budapest, Pázmány Péter stny. 1/c, Hungary..
With the exception of polycopids, Mesozoic myodocopid ostracods are regarded as uncommon in the fossil record. They are known from a few localities in the Tethys, and most of them are considered to be pelagic forms. However, a relatively rich and taxonomically diverse material is derived from Hungarian sections; these represent various formations deposited during the Triassic to Cretaceous.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Biol Sci
February 2013
Department of Geology, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK.
Ostracod crustaceans are the most abundant fossil arthropods. The Silurian Pauline avibella gen. et sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSyst Biol
March 2012
Ecology, Evolution, Marine Biology and Marine Science Institute, University of California-Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA.
Complex organs such as eyes are commonly lost during evolution, but the timescale on which lost phenotypes could be reactivated is a matter of long-standing debate, with important implications for the molecular mechanisms of trait loss. Two phylogenetic approaches have been used to test whether regain of traits has occurred. One way is by comparison of nested, continuous-time Markov models of trait evolution, approaches that we term tree-based tests.
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