If the tape were played again: Lineage evolution and the causes of phylogenetic similarity in two tropical assemblages of Coleoptera
Data files
Nov 12, 2024 version files 74.66 MB
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alignment.nex
74.66 MB
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README.md
1.32 KB
Abstract
Communities of insects around the world consist of unique sets of species that have evolved under different historical processes of assembly and lineage diversification. Whole-community phylogenetics can partition the shared and uniquely derived evolutionary history at sites. We used mitochondrial genome sequences of >1000 species each from two assemblages of Coleoptera (beetles) in distantly situated tropical lowland rainforest of Malaysia and Panama for phylogenetic reconstruction and community ecological analysis. Assemblages were entirely distinct at species level but were surprisingly similar at family level in their overall composition and relative species richness, despite a high degree of phylogenetic clustering that implied independent evolution. Inclusion of species poor lineages reduced the level of community clustering in parallel in both sites, indicating lineage-specific factors to determine species richness and their effect on local community composition. In conclusion, relative species richness in local community composition and global clade sizes are connected, in part due to biotic exchange in deep time, but more likely because of intrinsic rates of diversification unique to each clade (family), thus making assembly composition more predictable, i.e. the ‘evolutionary tape’ would be similar wherever a new assemblage of tropical-forest Coleoptera arises.
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.zpc866tj7
Description of the data and file structure
Mitochondrial genome data were generated to assess the diversity and phylogeny of Coleoptera from tropical sites in Panama and Malaysian Borneo. Beetle specimens were collected using standardized trapping methods across 1-hectare plots at each location. From each morphospecies identified, genomic DNA was extracted and mitogenomes were retrieved through genome skimming. The mitogenomes were then assembled, annotated, and aligned for 13 protein-coding genes. To increase taxonomic and geographic diversity in phylogenetic analyses, additional mitochondrial genomes from GenBank were included, with one representative per genus selected.
Files and variables
File: alignment.nex
Description: A NEXUS format file containing aligned mitogenome sequences for all taxa in the study, including both GenBank-derived and newly assembled sequences.
Code/software
Associated scripts to recreate all analyses in the manuscript are available at: https://github.com/FLCarpenter/BorneoPanama.