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Evaluating the performance of anchored hybrid enrichment at the tips of the tree of life: a phylogenetic analysis of Australian Eugongylus group scincid lizards
by
Singhal, Sonal
, Chapple, David G
, Lemmon, Alan R
, Bragg, Jason G
, Moritz, Craig
, Thompson, Michael B
, Lemmon, Emily Moriarty
, Brandley, Matthew C
, Jennings, Charlotte K
in
Analysis
/ Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Animals
/ Australia
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Entomology
/ Evolution, Molecular
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Genetic aspects
/ Genetics and Population Dynamics
/ Life Sciences
/ Lizards - classification
/ Lizards - genetics
/ Lizards - physiology
/ Phylogenetics and phylogeography
/ Phylogeny
/ Phylogeography
/ Physiological aspects
/ Research Article
/ Sequence Analysis, DNA
2015
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Evaluating the performance of anchored hybrid enrichment at the tips of the tree of life: a phylogenetic analysis of Australian Eugongylus group scincid lizards
by
Singhal, Sonal
, Chapple, David G
, Lemmon, Alan R
, Bragg, Jason G
, Moritz, Craig
, Thompson, Michael B
, Lemmon, Emily Moriarty
, Brandley, Matthew C
, Jennings, Charlotte K
in
Analysis
/ Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Animals
/ Australia
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Entomology
/ Evolution, Molecular
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Genetic aspects
/ Genetics and Population Dynamics
/ Life Sciences
/ Lizards - classification
/ Lizards - genetics
/ Lizards - physiology
/ Phylogenetics and phylogeography
/ Phylogeny
/ Phylogeography
/ Physiological aspects
/ Research Article
/ Sequence Analysis, DNA
2015
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Evaluating the performance of anchored hybrid enrichment at the tips of the tree of life: a phylogenetic analysis of Australian Eugongylus group scincid lizards
by
Singhal, Sonal
, Chapple, David G
, Lemmon, Alan R
, Bragg, Jason G
, Moritz, Craig
, Thompson, Michael B
, Lemmon, Emily Moriarty
, Brandley, Matthew C
, Jennings, Charlotte K
in
Analysis
/ Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Animals
/ Australia
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Entomology
/ Evolution, Molecular
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Genetic aspects
/ Genetics and Population Dynamics
/ Life Sciences
/ Lizards - classification
/ Lizards - genetics
/ Lizards - physiology
/ Phylogenetics and phylogeography
/ Phylogeny
/ Phylogeography
/ Physiological aspects
/ Research Article
/ Sequence Analysis, DNA
2015
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Evaluating the performance of anchored hybrid enrichment at the tips of the tree of life: a phylogenetic analysis of Australian Eugongylus group scincid lizards
Journal Article
Evaluating the performance of anchored hybrid enrichment at the tips of the tree of life: a phylogenetic analysis of Australian Eugongylus group scincid lizards
2015
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Overview
Background
High-throughput sequencing using targeted enrichment and transcriptomic methods enables rapid construction of phylogenomic data sets incorporating hundreds to thousands of loci. These advances have enabled access to an unprecedented amount of nucleotide sequence data, but they also pose new questions. Given that the loci targeted for enrichment are often highly conserved, how informative are they at different taxonomic scales, especially at the intraspecific/phylogeographic scale? We investigate this question using Australian scincid lizards in the
Eugongylus
group (Squamata: Scincidae). We sequenced 415 anchored hybrid enriched (AHE) loci for 43 individuals and mined 1650 exons (1648 loci) from transcriptomes (transcriptome mining) from 11 individuals, including multiple phylogeographic lineages within several species of
Carlia
,
Lampropholis
, and
Saproscincus
skinks. We assessed the phylogenetic information content of these loci at the intergeneric, interspecific, and phylogeographic scales. As a further test of the utility at the phylogeographic scale, we used the anchor hybrid enriched loci to infer lineage divergence parameters using coalescent models of isolation with migration.
Results
Phylogenetic analyses of both data sets inferred very strongly supported trees at all taxonomic levels. Further, AHE loci yielded estimates of divergence times between closely related lineages that were broadly consistent with previous population-level analyses.
Conclusions
Anchored-enriched loci are useful at the deep phylogeny and phylogeographic scales. Although overall phylogenetic support was high throughout the Australian
Eugongylus
group phylogeny, there were nonetheless some conflicting or unresolved relationships, especially regarding the placement of
Pseudemoia
,
Cryptoblepharus
, and the relationships amongst closely-related species of Tasmanian
Niveoscincus
skinks.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd
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