Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1
410 CHAPTER 16

Many methods are used to estimate phylogenies from DNA sequences. The sim-
plest is parsimony, which we described above. The example in FIGURE 16.12 shows
how parsimony works when the data are complicated by homoplasy. We wish to
determine the relationships among species 1, 2, and 3. Their true evolutionary his-
tory is shown in tree A, but in reality, we do not know that. To estimate the phylog-
eny, we note that the sequences of the outgroup species suggest that the ancestral
sequence was very likely AAA. Under the hypothesis that tree A is correct, at least
4 changes are needed to account for the sequences in the living species. One of the

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Chloroplasts

Mitochondria

Other
bacteria

Proteobacteria
Cyanobacteria Crenarchaeota

Euryarchaeota

Bacteria Archaea Eukarya

FIGURE 16.10 An imaginative portrayal Animals Fungi Plants Algae Ciliates
of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) during
the early history of life. HGT makes the
evolutionary relations among species
resemble a network rather than a simple
branching tree. The early evolution of the
Bacteria and Archaea may have involved
massive HGT, which continues at a lower
rate today. HGT was also responsible for
the origin of the eukaryotes and the origin
of plants.

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3L

G M A

M G A

A G M

11%
62%
27%
7%
87%
6%
4%
92%
4%
12%
79%
9%
67%
23%
10%
0 Mb 10 20 30 40 50 60

2L 2La inversion

2R

3R

X

FIGURE 16.11 Gene trees from different parts of the genome
give conflicting evidence about the phylogenetic relations of
three mosquito species that are important malaria vectors. The
different gene trees result from a long history of hybridization,
as well as incomplete lineage sorting. Left: The three possible
gene trees showing the relations among the species Anoph-
eles gambiae (G), A. melas (M), and A. arabiensis (A). Right: The
horizontal panels represent the major chromosome elements of
the mosquito’s genome: the left and right arms of chromosome 2,
the left and right arms of chromosome 3, and the X chromosome.

Each chromosome is divided into many 10-kilobase (kb) windows,
and the color of each vertical line shows the gene tree for a given
window, with colors corresponding to the gene trees at left. On
the left arm of chromosome 3, for example, 92 percent of the
gene trees suggest that A. gambiae is most closely related to A.
arabiensis. Gene trees on the X chromosome are deeper (older)
than those on the autosomes, which strongly suggests that they
reflect the history of speciation. The conclusion is that A. melas
and A. arabiensis are sister species, as shown in the phylogeny at
the top left. (From [12].)

16_EVOL4E_CH16.indd 410 3/22/17 1:33 PM

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