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Toward consilience in reptile phylogeny: miRNAs support an archosaur, not lepidosaur, affinity for turtles

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dc.contributor.author Field, Daniel J. en
dc.contributor.author Gauthier, Jacques A. en
dc.contributor.author King, Benjamin L. en
dc.contributor.author Pisani, Davide en
dc.contributor.author Lyson, Tyler R. en
dc.contributor.author Peterson, Kevin J. en
dc.date.accessioned 2015-04-20T15:15:07Z
dc.date.available 2015-04-20T15:15:07Z
dc.date.issued 2014
dc.identifier.citation Field, Daniel J., Gauthier, Jacques A., King, Benjamin L., Pisani, Davide, Lyson, Tyler R., and Peterson, Kevin J. 2014. "Toward consilience in reptile phylogeny: miRNAs support an archosaur, not lepidosaur, affinity for turtles." <em>Evolution & development</em>. 16 (4):189&ndash;196. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1111/ede.12081">https://doi.org/10.1111/ede.12081</a> en
dc.identifier.issn 1525-142X
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10088/25070
dc.description.abstract Understanding the phylogenetic position of crown turtles (Testudines) among amniotes has been a source of particular contention. Recent morphological analyses suggest that turtles are sister to all other reptiles, whereas the vast majority of gene sequence analyses support turtles as being inside Diapsida, and usually as sister to crown Archosauria (birds and crocodilians). Previously, a study using miRNAs (miRNAs) placed turtles inside diapsids, but as sister to lepidosaurs (lizards and Sphenodon) rather than archosaurs. Here, we test this hypothesis with an expanded miRNA presence/absence dataset, and employ more rigorous criteria for miRNA annotation. Significantly, we find no support for a turtle?+?lepidosaur sister-relationship; instead, we recover strong support for turtles sharing a more recent common ancestor with archosaurs. We further test this result by analyzing a super-alignment of precursor miRNA sequences for every miRNA inferred to have been present in the most recent common ancestor of tetrapods. This analysis yields a topology that is fully congruent with our presence/absence analysis; our results are therefore in accordance with most gene sequence studies, providing strong, consilient molecular evidence from diverse independent datasets regarding the phylogenetic position of turtles. en
dc.relation.ispartof Evolution & development en
dc.title Toward consilience in reptile phylogeny: miRNAs support an archosaur, not lepidosaur, affinity for turtles en
dc.type Journal Article en
dc.identifier.srbnumber 121023
dc.identifier.doi 10.1111/ede.12081
rft.jtitle Evolution & development
rft.volume 16
rft.issue 4
rft.spage 189
rft.epage 196
dc.description.SIUnit NH-Vertebrate Zoology en
dc.description.SIUnit NMNH en
dc.description.SIUnit Peer-reviewed en
dc.citation.spage 189
dc.citation.epage 196


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