Where are the biggest gaps in phylogenetic coverage of insect diversity?

被引:1
|
作者
Chesters, Douglas [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Zool, Key Lab Zool Systemat & Evolut, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Int Coll, Beijing, Peoples R China
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
database; Phyloinformatics; standardization; synthesis phylogenetics; tree of life; TREE; ARTHROPODS; COLEOPTERA; WEEVILS; REVEALS;
D O I
10.1111/syen.12652
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Gaps in phylogenetic knowledge are unlikely to be filled in an optimal manner in the absence of a quantitative descriptive framework of phylogenetic coverage to date and a strategy for addressing the remainder (the Darwinian Shortfall). One strategy would be modelling phylogenetic progress on a framework of insect diversity, such as a taxonomic database. I herein sampled existing phylogenetic coverage by collating a machine-readable tree from each of 1000 insect publications. Processing comprised primarily taxonomic harmonization, the standardization of terminal labels and pruning of uninformative terminal sets such as taxon duplicates. The phylogeny database contained 94,173 unique species IDs over 154,938 terminals in total, with a respective mean and median number of species per phylogeny of 155 and 44. Omics phylogenies contained the most species on average, though not the most novel species, and mitogenome phylogenies contributed the fewest novel species. Synthesis phylogenies were very few in number, but nonetheless predicted to contribute most to increasing phylogenetic coverage of insect diversity. 6.2% of the 970,000 species of the Catalogue of Life were contained amongst the terminals of the database of phylogenies. Phylogenetic coverage of insect families was often disproportionate to species-richness; those most undersampled were beetles and included families Curculionidae, Staphylinidae, Cerambycidae, and Scarabaeidae, and those with disproportionately high phylogenetic coverage included families of the dragonflies, bees, butterflies and ants. The work herein provides a foundation for quantification of the Darwinian Shortfall, and for shifting to an objective strategy for completing the insect Tree of Life. A novel database of 1000 insect phylogenies was compiled and contained 94,173 unique species over 154,938 terminals in total. Omics phylogenies contained the most species on average, though not the most novel species, and mitogenome phylogenies contributed the fewest novel species. Species sampling in the phylogenies was disproportionate to richness across families, with bees, butterflies and ants oversampled, and Curculionidae, Staphylinidae and Cerambycidae undersampled. image
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 236
页数:16
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