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Seabird and louse coevolution: complex histories revealed by 12S rRNA sequences and reconciliation analyses.
Syst Biol. 2000 Sep; 49(3):383-99.SB

Abstract

We investigated the coevolutionary history of seabirds (orders Procellariiformes and Sphenisciformes) and their lice (order Phthiraptera). Independent trees were produced for the seabirds (tree derived from 12S ribosomal RNA, isoenzyme, and behavioral data) and their lice (trees derived from 12S rRNA data). Brook's parsimony analysis (BPA) supported a general history of cospeciation (consistency index = 0.84, retention index = 0.81). We inferred that the homoplasy in the BPA was caused by one intrahost speciation, one potential host-switching, and eight or nine sorting events. Using reconciliation analysis, we quantified the cost of fitting the louse tree onto the seabird tree. The reconciled trees postulated one host-switching, nine cospeciation, three or four intrahost speciation, and 11 to 14 sorting events. The number of cospeciation events was significantly more than would be expected from chance alone (P < 0.01). The sequence data were used to test for rate heterogeneity for both seabirds and lice. Neither data set displayed significant rate heterogeneity. An examination of the codivergent nodes revealed that seabirds and lice have cospeciated synchronously and that lice have evolved at approximately 5.5 times the rate of seabirds. The degree of sequence divergence supported some of the postulated intrahost speciation events (e.g., Halipeurus predated the evolution of their present hosts). The sequence data also supported some of the postulated host-switching events. These results demonstrate the value of sequence data and reconciliation analyses in unraveling complex histories between hosts and their parasites.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Ecology and Entomology Group, Lincoln University, P.O. Box 84, Lincoln, New Zealand. PatersoA@lincoln.ac.nzNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

12116418

Citation

Paterson, A M., et al. "Seabird and Louse Coevolution: Complex Histories Revealed By 12S rRNA Sequences and Reconciliation Analyses." Systematic Biology, vol. 49, no. 3, 2000, pp. 383-99.
Paterson AM, Wallis GP, Wallis LJ, et al. Seabird and louse coevolution: complex histories revealed by 12S rRNA sequences and reconciliation analyses. Syst Biol. 2000;49(3):383-99.
Paterson, A. M., Wallis, G. P., Wallis, L. J., & Gray, R. D. (2000). Seabird and louse coevolution: complex histories revealed by 12S rRNA sequences and reconciliation analyses. Systematic Biology, 49(3), 383-99.
Paterson AM, et al. Seabird and Louse Coevolution: Complex Histories Revealed By 12S rRNA Sequences and Reconciliation Analyses. Syst Biol. 2000;49(3):383-99. PubMed PMID: 12116418.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Seabird and louse coevolution: complex histories revealed by 12S rRNA sequences and reconciliation analyses. AU - Paterson,A M, AU - Wallis,G P, AU - Wallis,L J, AU - Gray,R D, PY - 2002/7/16/pubmed PY - 2002/8/10/medline PY - 2002/7/16/entrez SP - 383 EP - 99 JF - Systematic biology JO - Syst Biol VL - 49 IS - 3 N2 - We investigated the coevolutionary history of seabirds (orders Procellariiformes and Sphenisciformes) and their lice (order Phthiraptera). Independent trees were produced for the seabirds (tree derived from 12S ribosomal RNA, isoenzyme, and behavioral data) and their lice (trees derived from 12S rRNA data). Brook's parsimony analysis (BPA) supported a general history of cospeciation (consistency index = 0.84, retention index = 0.81). We inferred that the homoplasy in the BPA was caused by one intrahost speciation, one potential host-switching, and eight or nine sorting events. Using reconciliation analysis, we quantified the cost of fitting the louse tree onto the seabird tree. The reconciled trees postulated one host-switching, nine cospeciation, three or four intrahost speciation, and 11 to 14 sorting events. The number of cospeciation events was significantly more than would be expected from chance alone (P < 0.01). The sequence data were used to test for rate heterogeneity for both seabirds and lice. Neither data set displayed significant rate heterogeneity. An examination of the codivergent nodes revealed that seabirds and lice have cospeciated synchronously and that lice have evolved at approximately 5.5 times the rate of seabirds. The degree of sequence divergence supported some of the postulated intrahost speciation events (e.g., Halipeurus predated the evolution of their present hosts). The sequence data also supported some of the postulated host-switching events. These results demonstrate the value of sequence data and reconciliation analyses in unraveling complex histories between hosts and their parasites. SN - 1063-5157 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/12116418/Seabird_and_louse_coevolution:_complex_histories_revealed_by_12S_rRNA_sequences_and_reconciliation_analyses_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -