AI Article Synopsis

  • The Ephydroidea superfamily, which includes diverse families like Drosophilidae (vinegar flies) and Ephydridae (shore flies), presents challenges for understanding their evolutionary relationships due to their extreme diversity in life histories and morphology.
  • Researchers used phylogenomic techniques, analyzing 320 nuclear genes from 32 Ephydroidea species, to investigate these relationships, leading to the conclusion that the superfamily is monophyletic with distinct evolutionary branches.
  • Findings confirmed Mormotomyiidae as a unique family closely related to other Ephydroidea, with Cryptochetidae positioned as a sister lineage to a clade containing Drosophilidae and Braulidae, highlighting the importance of comprehensive species and character

Article Abstract

The schizophoran superfamily Ephydroidea (Diptera: Cyclorrhapha) includes eight families, ranging from the well-known vinegar flies (Drosophilidae) and shore flies (Ephydridae), to several small, relatively unusual groups, the phylogenetic placement of which has been particularly challenging for systematists. An extraordinary diversity in life histories, feeding habits and morphology are a hallmark of fly biology, and the Ephydroidea are no exception. Extreme specialization can lead to "orphaned" taxa with no clear evidence for their phylogenetic position. To resolve relationships among a diverse sample of Ephydroidea, including the highly modified flies in the families Braulidae and Mormotomyiidae, we conducted phylogenomic sampling. Using exon capture from Anchored Hybrid Enrichment and transcriptomics to obtain 320 orthologous nuclear genes sampled for 32 species of Ephydroidea and 11 outgroups, we evaluate a new phylogenetic hypothesis for representatives of the superfamily. These data strongly support monophyly of Ephydroidea with Ephydridae as an early branching radiation and the placement of Mormotomyiidae as a family-level lineage sister to all remaining families. We confirm placement of Cryptochetidae as sister taxon to a large clade containing both Drosophilidae and Braulidae-the latter a family of honeybee ectoparasites. Our results reaffirm that sampling of both taxa and characters is critical in hyperdiverse clades and that these factors have a major influence on phylogenomic reconstruction of the history of the schizophoran fly radiation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9534441PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0274292PLOS

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Article Synopsis
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