TY - JOUR
T1 - One-way ticket to the blue
T2 - A large-scale, dated phylogeny revealed asymmetric land-to-water transitions in acariform mites (Acari: Acariformes)
AU - Pepato, Almir R.
AU - Samuel, Samuel G.
AU - Harvey, Mark S.
AU - Klimov, Pavel B.
N1 - Funding Information:
ARP and PBK were supported by Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) through Ciência sem Fronteiras (Brazil; PVE 88881 . 064989/2014 ‐ 01), CAPES Print (88887.572661/2020-00); and Russian Science Foundation (No. 19-14-00004), which granted resources for sampling and sequencing. The authors thank the Program for Technological Development in Tools for Health ‐ PDTISFIOCRUZ for use of its facilities. PBK was supported by a grant from the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation № 075-15-2021-1345. ARP is supported by a PQ-2 CNPq fellowship (process 309979/2021-8). Special thanks are to Dr. Barry OConnor for receiving ARP at the University of Michigan (Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology), where this manuscript started to be prepared, to Dr. Owen Seeman and Dr. Robert Raven (Queensland Museum, Australia), and to Dr. Nuria Shamionova (Azerbaijan Academy of Sciences) for their kind assistance when sampling in Australia and Azerbaijan, respectively, and to Dr Stefan Eberhard for the donation of pezids to the Western Australian Museum. SGSC thanks Programa de Pós Graduação em Zoologia da UFMG and Tyumen State University, X-Bio Institute, where he develops his research, and Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais (FAPEMIG) and CAPES for his scholarships (Graduate Support Program FAPEMIG – PAPG, CAPES – Print, Finance Code 001).
Funding Information:
ARP and PBK were supported by Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) through Ciência sem Fronteiras (Brazil; PVE 88881. 064989/2014 ‐ 01), CAPES Print (88887.572661/2020-00); and Russian Science Foundation (No. 19-14-00004), which granted resources for sampling and sequencing. The authors thank the Program for Technological Development in Tools for Health ‐ PDTISFIOCRUZ for use of its facilities. PBK was supported by a grant from the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation № 075-15-2021-1345. ARP is supported by a PQ-2 CNPq fellowship (process 309979/2021-8). Special thanks are to Dr. Barry OConnor for receiving ARP at the University of Michigan (Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology), where this manuscript started to be prepared, to Dr. Owen Seeman and Dr. Robert Raven (Queensland Museum, Australia), and to Dr. Nuria Shamionova (Azerbaijan Academy of Sciences) for their kind assistance when sampling in Australia and Azerbaijan, respectively, and to Dr Stefan Eberhard for the donation of pezids to the Western Australian Museum. SGSC thanks Programa de Pós Graduação em Zoologia da UFMG and Tyumen State University, X-Bio Institute, where he develops his research, and Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais (FAPEMIG) and CAPES for his scholarships (Graduate Support Program FAPEMIG – PAPG, CAPES – Print, Finance Code 001).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Acariform mites are an ancient and megadiverse lineage that may have experienced a complex pattern of invasions into terrestrial and aquatic habitats. These among-realm transitions may relate to periods of turmoil in Earth's history or be simply results of uneven biodiversity patterns across habitats. Here, we inferred a dated, representative acariform phylogeny (five genes, 9,200 bp aligned, 367 terminals belonging to 150 ingroup plus 15 outgroup families, 23 fossil calibration points) which was used to infer transitions between marine/freshwater/terrestrial habitats. We detected four unambiguous transitions from terrestrial to freshwater habitats (Hydrozetes, Naiadacarus, Fusohericia, Afronothrus, Homocaligus); one from freshwater to marine (Pontarachnidae), and four from marine to brackish or freshwater transitions (all among Halacaridae: Acarothrix; Halacarellus petiti; Copidognathus sp.; clade Limnohalacarus + Soldanellonyx + Porohalacarus + Porolohmannella). One transition to the sea was inferred ambiguously with respect to the ancestor being either terrestrial or freshwater (Hyadesiidae), and another must be most carefully examined by adding potential related taxa (Selenoribatidae + Fortuyniidae). Finally, we inferred a single, remarkable transition from aquatic to terrestrial habitats involving early evolution of the large and ecologically diverse lineage: the ancestor of the Halacaridae + Parasitengona clade was probably freshwater given our dataset, thus making terrestrial Parasitengona secondarily terrestrial. Overall, our results suggested a strong asymmetry in environmental transitions: the majority occurred from terrestrial to aquatic habitats. This asymmetry is probably linked to mites’ biological properties and uneven biodiversity patterns across habitats rather than Earth's geological history. Since the land holds more acariform diversity than water habitats, a shift from the former is more likely than from the latter. We inferred the following relationships: alicid endeostigmatid + eriophyoid (Alycidae, (Nanorchestidae, (Nematalycidae, Eriophyoidea))) being sister group to the remaining Acariformes: (proteonematalycid Endeostigmata, alicorhagiid Endeostigmata, Trombidiformes, Oribatida (including Astigmata)). Trombidiform relationships had several novel rearrangements: (i) traditional Eupodina lacked support for the inclusion of Bdelloidea; (ii) Teneriffidae, traditionally placed among Anystina, was consistently recovered in a clade including Heterostigmata in Eleutherengona; (iii) several lineages, such as Adamystidae, Paratydeidae, Caeculidae and Erythracaridae, were recovered in a large clade along other Anystina and Eleutherengona, suggesting single origins of several fundamental character states, such as the reduction of the cheliceral fixed digit and development of the palpal thumb-claw complex.
AB - Acariform mites are an ancient and megadiverse lineage that may have experienced a complex pattern of invasions into terrestrial and aquatic habitats. These among-realm transitions may relate to periods of turmoil in Earth's history or be simply results of uneven biodiversity patterns across habitats. Here, we inferred a dated, representative acariform phylogeny (five genes, 9,200 bp aligned, 367 terminals belonging to 150 ingroup plus 15 outgroup families, 23 fossil calibration points) which was used to infer transitions between marine/freshwater/terrestrial habitats. We detected four unambiguous transitions from terrestrial to freshwater habitats (Hydrozetes, Naiadacarus, Fusohericia, Afronothrus, Homocaligus); one from freshwater to marine (Pontarachnidae), and four from marine to brackish or freshwater transitions (all among Halacaridae: Acarothrix; Halacarellus petiti; Copidognathus sp.; clade Limnohalacarus + Soldanellonyx + Porohalacarus + Porolohmannella). One transition to the sea was inferred ambiguously with respect to the ancestor being either terrestrial or freshwater (Hyadesiidae), and another must be most carefully examined by adding potential related taxa (Selenoribatidae + Fortuyniidae). Finally, we inferred a single, remarkable transition from aquatic to terrestrial habitats involving early evolution of the large and ecologically diverse lineage: the ancestor of the Halacaridae + Parasitengona clade was probably freshwater given our dataset, thus making terrestrial Parasitengona secondarily terrestrial. Overall, our results suggested a strong asymmetry in environmental transitions: the majority occurred from terrestrial to aquatic habitats. This asymmetry is probably linked to mites’ biological properties and uneven biodiversity patterns across habitats rather than Earth's geological history. Since the land holds more acariform diversity than water habitats, a shift from the former is more likely than from the latter. We inferred the following relationships: alicid endeostigmatid + eriophyoid (Alycidae, (Nanorchestidae, (Nematalycidae, Eriophyoidea))) being sister group to the remaining Acariformes: (proteonematalycid Endeostigmata, alicorhagiid Endeostigmata, Trombidiformes, Oribatida (including Astigmata)). Trombidiform relationships had several novel rearrangements: (i) traditional Eupodina lacked support for the inclusion of Bdelloidea; (ii) Teneriffidae, traditionally placed among Anystina, was consistently recovered in a clade including Heterostigmata in Eleutherengona; (iii) several lineages, such as Adamystidae, Paratydeidae, Caeculidae and Erythracaridae, were recovered in a large clade along other Anystina and Eleutherengona, suggesting single origins of several fundamental character states, such as the reduction of the cheliceral fixed digit and development of the palpal thumb-claw complex.
KW - Divergence time estimation
KW - Halacaridae
KW - Marine-freshwater transitions
KW - Parasitengona
KW - Secondarily marine taxa
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85138554465&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107626
DO - 10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107626
M3 - Article
C2 - 36096463
AN - SCOPUS:85138554465
SN - 1055-7903
VL - 177
JO - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
M1 - 107626
ER -