A shallow‐scale phylogenomics approach reveals repeated patterns of diversification among sympatric lineages of cryptic Neotropical aquatic beetles (Coleoptera: Noteridae)

Author:

Baca Stephen M.123ORCID,Gustafson Grey T.4,DeRaad Devon A.13,Alexander Alana5ORCID,Hime Paul M.6,Short Andrew E. Z.7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

2. Division of Entomology, Biodiversity Institute University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

3. Division of Ornithology, Biodiversity Institute University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

4. Department of Biological Sciences Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USA

5. Department of Anatomy, School of Biomedical Sciences University of Otago Dunedin New Zealand

6. Division of Herpetology, Biodiversity Institute University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

7. Department of Entomology and Nematology University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractThe Notomicrus traili species group (Coleoptera: Noteridae) is a lineage of aquatic beetles distributed throughout South America and extends into Mexico and the West Indies. Previous research has revealed a species complex within this group, with multiple distinct clades sharing overlapping distributions and lineages attributed to N. traili and the closely related Notomicrus gracilipes recovered as polyphyletic. Here, we perform targeted capture of ultraconserved elements (UCEs) to examine relationships and patterns of evolution within the N. traili group. First, we use short‐read whole‐genome sequencing of four noterid genera to design a noterid‐specific UCE probe set (Noteridae 3.4Kv1) targeting over 3400 unique loci. Using this probe set, we capture UCE data from population‐level sampling of 44 traili group specimens from across the Neotropics, with an emphasis on the Guiana Shield where distributions of several putative N. traili group populations overlap. We subject the resulting data matrix to various trimming and data completeness treatments and reconstruct the phylogeny with both concatenated maximum likelihood and coalescent congruent methods. We recover robust phylogenetic estimates that identify several phylogenetically distinct clades within the traili group that share overlapping distributions. To test for the genetic distinctiveness of populations, we extract single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data from UCE alignments using a chimeric reference method to map UCE‐enriched reads and examine patterns of genetic clustering using principal component analyses (PCAs) and STRUCTURE. Population genetic results are highly concordant with recovered phylogenetic structure, revealing a high degree of co‐ancestry shared within identified clades, contrasting with limited ancestry sharing between clades. We recover a pattern consistent with repeated diversification and dispersal of the traili group in the Neotropics, highlighting the efficacy of a tailored UCE approach for facilitating shallow‐scale phylogenetic reconstructions and population genetic analyses, which can reveal novel aspects of coleopteran phylogeography.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference133 articles.

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