Reanalyzing the Palaeoptera problem - The origin of insect flight remains obscure.

Arthropod Struct Dev

Evolutionary Biology & Ecology, Institute for Biology, University of Freiburg, Hauptstr. 1, D-79104 Freiburg (Brsg.), Germany; Center of Molecular Biodiversity Research (ZMB), Zoological Research Museum A. Koenig (ZFMK), Adenauerallee 160, D-53113 Bonn, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: July 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The relationships among winged insect groups, including mayflies, damselflies, dragonflies, and other Neoptera, are debated, with three main hypotheses (Palaeoptera, Metapterygota, and Chiastomyaria) based on various data sources.
  • This study revisits phylogenomic data to identify conflicting signals and assess the reliability of these relationships, revealing a strong support for Palaeoptera but also notable evidence for Chiastomyaria, often overlooked in standard analyses.
  • While morphological evidence seems to favor the Palaeoptera hypothesis, further research considering all insect body parts and potential convergence is needed, leaving the issue unresolved in insect classification.

Article Abstract

The phylogenetic relationships of the winged insect lineages - mayflies (Ephemeroptera), damselflies and dragonflies (Odonata), and all other winged insects (Neoptera) - are still controversial with three hypotheses supported by different datasets: Palaeoptera, Metapterygota and Chiastomyaria. Here, we reanalyze available phylogenomic data with a focus on detecting confounding and alternative signal. In this context, we provide a framework to quantitatively evaluate and assess incongruent molecular phylogenetic signal inherent in phylogenomic datasets. Despite overall support for the Palaeoptera hypothesis, we also found considerable signal for Chiastomyaria, which is not easily detectable by standardized tree inference approaches. Analyses of the accumulation of signal across gene partitions showed that signal accumulates gradually. However, even in case signal only slightly supported one over the other hypothesis, topologies inferred from large datasets switch from statistically strongly supported Palaeoptera to strongly supported Chiastomyaria. From a morphological point of view, Palaeoptera currently appears to be the best-supported hypothesis; however, recent analyses were restricted to head characters. Phylogenetic approaches covering all organ systems including analyses of potential functional or developmental convergence are still pending so that the Palaeoptera problem has to be considered an open question in insect systematics.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.asd.2018.05.002DOI Listing

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