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Wattles and Wombats: Molecular rate variation and Biodiversity Xavier Goldie The University of Auckland The Australian National University

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Wattles and Wombats: Molecular rate variation and Biodiversity Xavier Goldie The University of Auckland The Australian National University. Outline:. Biodiversity and Evolution Evolutionary Speed in Australian Plants Evolutionary Speed Hypothesis Productivity and the Water-Energy Balance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Outline:

Wattles and Wombats:

Molecular rate variation and Biodiversity

Xavier Goldie

The University of AucklandThe Australian National University

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Outline:• Biodiversity and Evolution

• Evolutionary Speed in Australian Plants

• Evolutionary Speed Hypothesis

• Productivity and the Water-Energy Balance

• Outcomes

• Molecular rates in Mammals

• Diversification and molecular rates: crash course

• Outcomes

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Biodiversity and Evolution

• What drives diversification?

SPECIATION - EXTINCTION

• Why are species unevenly distributed -

• Spatially?

• Phylogenetically?

• Temporally?

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Rodents

Lagomorphs

Primates +

Cetartiodactyla +

Carnivora +

Chiroptera

Shrews and stuff

Xenarthra

Afrotheria

Metatheria

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Evolutionary Speed in Australian Plants

Climate and Biodiversity

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Rohde’s Evolutionary Speed Hypothesis (ESH)

Bromham and Cardillo 2003

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Rohde’s ESH deals specifically with the relationship between global temperature and biodiversity

However…

Terrestrial biodiversity is linked most tightly to the interaction of temperature and the physical state of water

“Water-Energy Balance”(Hawkins et al 2003)

“Productivity”(Gillman and Wright, 2006)

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Is Rohde’s ESH applicable to gradients of water availability?

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Species RichnessRainfallProductivity

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Amyema congener

Amyema maidenii

“Wet”

“Dry”

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30 Phylogenetically Independent contrasts

Branch length Trait

P.A.

Branch length Trait

Branch length Trait

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Significantly more (23 of 30) comparisons resulted in longer “Wet” branch lengths

(Sign Test: P = 0.005)

The rate of nucleotide substitution in “Wet” zone taxa was on average more than twice that of

closely related “Dry” zone congeners

(Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test:

W = 93, P = 0.003).

Goldie et al., 2010

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Results are consistent with the evolutionary speed hypothesis

Optimised water-energy balance may act to increase micro-evolutionary rates

in mesic areas

Arid conditions may lead to slower tempo of micro-evolution

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Bromham and Cardillo 2003

Rohde’s Evolutionary Speed Hypothesis

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Molecular Rates

Speciation Rates

Wright et al 2006Lanfear et al In Prep

Webster et al 2003Pagel et al 2006

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Molecular Rates in Mammals

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What is the relationship between the rate of molecular evolution,

and diversification,in mammals?

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Whole Mitochondrial Genomes and Nuclear Genes

Estimated Synonymous, Non-Synonymous and total substitution rates

(MG94_REV_3x4 in HyPHY)

Mitochondrial Sister-clades at roughly ordinal, familial and generic level

Nuclear Sister-Clades in Mammalia, Eutheria, Metatheria, Euarchontoglires and Laurasiatheria

Sign-Tests and Parametric Regression

Included Body Size in Multiple Regression

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Ne and/or Selection

Mutation

Clade A Clade B Clade A Clade B

dN

dS - -

dN/dS - -

Brlen

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No consistent relationship between molecular rates and clade size - mitochondrial or nuclear

Body Size Effect detected in nuclear genes, but not in mitochondrial

Saturated Synonymous Rates in mitochondrial genes

“RY” Coded four-fold degenerate sites - record only synonymous Transversions (T or C ↔ G or A)

No relationship

(Goldie et al, In Prep)

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Eutheria

ML Brlen versus Clade Size

P = 0.00545

But not repeated in dN or dS

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Welch et al 2007

P = 0.1260

Mitochondrial dS

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BUT WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN?

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Lack of apparent relationship between mammalian molecular rates and diversification rates?

Molecular rates are not central to the diversification process in mammals

Different process operating between plants and mammals - has been suggested

But why birds, and not mammals?

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Gillman et al 2009

Higher rates of molecular evolution in tropical mammals versus temperate PICs

Interpreted as support for Evolutionary Speed Hypothesis driving Latitudinal Species Gradients

Bassariscus astustus Bassariscus sumichrasti

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Rohde’s ESH

Bromham and Cardillo, 2003

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Acknowledgements:

Shane Wright

Len Gillman

Lindell Bromham

Rob Lanfear

Nga Pae O Te Maramatanga Maori Centre of Research Excellence

The Australian National University

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Questions?