Home
Home Publications
    • FAQ
    • Stories/News
    • Literature
    • Websites
    • About ATree
    • Home

Mitogenomic perspectives on the origin and phylogeny of living amphibians

  • mtDNA
  • Mitogenomics
  • Salamanders
  • Caecilians
  • Frogs
TitleMitogenomic perspectives on the origin and phylogeny of living amphibians
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsZhang, Peng, Zhou Hui, Chen Yue-Qin, Liu Yi-Fei, and Qu Liang-Hu
Journal TitleSyst. Biol.
Volume54
Pages391-400
Keywordsmitogenomes, molecular clock, phylogenetics
Abstract

Establishing the relationships among modern amphibians (lissamphibians) and their ancient relatives is necessary for our understanding of early tetrapod evolution. However, the phylogeny is still intractable because of the highly specialized anatomy and poor fossil record of lissamphibians. Paleobiologists are still not sure whether lissamphibians are monophyletic or polyphyletic, and which ancient group (temnospondyls or lepospondyls) is most closely related to them. In an attempt to address these problems, eight mitochondrial genomes of living amphibians were determined and compared with previously published amphibian sequences. A comprehensive molecular phylogenetic analysis of nucleotide sequences yields a highly resolved tree congruent with the traditional hypotheses (Batrachia). By using a molecular clock independent approach for inferring dating information from molecular phylogenies, we present here the first molecular timescale for lissamphibian evolution, which suggests that lissamphibians first emerged about 330 million years ago. By observing the fit between molecular and fossil times, we suggest that the temnospondyl-origin hypothesis for lissamphibians is more credible than other hypotheses. Moreover, under this timescale, the potential geographic origins of the main living amphibian groups are discussed: (i) advanced frogs (neobatrachians) may possess an Africa-India origin; (ii) salamanders may have originated in east Asia; (iii) the tropic forest of the Triassic Pangaea may be the place of origin for the ancient caecilians. An accurate phylogeny with divergence times can be also helpful to direct the search for "missing" fossils, and can benefit comparative studies of amphibian evolution.

Citation Key474
AttachmentSize
ZhangETAL2005_mitogenomes.pdf3.59 MB
  • 570 reads
  • Google Scholar

Content

  • Literature
  • ATree News
  • AWeb News

Navigation

  • Blogs

ATree Activities

  • Species Distribution Modeling Workshop

Feeds

  • ATree News Feed
  • AWeb News Feed
  • Recent Publications Feed

AWeb on Facebook

Recent Publications

  • Vast underestimation of Madagascar's biodiversity evidenced by an integrative amphibian inventory
  • Philippines frogs of the genus Leptobrachium (AnuraL Megophryidae): Phylogeny-based species delimitation, taxonomic review, and descriptions of three new species
  • Philippines frogs of the genus Leptobrachium (Anura: Megophryidae): Phylogeny-based species delimitation, taxonomic review, and descriptions of three new species
  • Examination of the molecular relationships of sand frogs (Anura: Pyxicephalidae: Tomopterna) and resurrection of two species from the Horn of Africa.
  • The deadly chytrid fungus: a story of an emerging pathogen
  • The Retention of the Lateral-Line Nucleus in Adult Anurans
  • Giant dwarfs: discovery of a radiation of large-bodied'stump-toed frogs' from karstic cave environments of northern Madagascar
  • Phylogeographic and demographic effects of Pleistocene climatic fluctuations in a montane salamander, Plethodon fourchensis
  • Potential causes for amphibian declines in Puerto Rico
  • Enzootic and epizootic dynamics of the chytrid fungal pathogen of amphibians
Syndicate contentMore...

Syndicate

Syndicate content
Powered by Drupal, an open source content management system
Funded by the National Science Foundation.
RoopleTheme