Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Fabre P. H., Tilak M. K., Denys C., Gaubert Philippe, Nicolas V., Douzery E. J. P., Marivaux L. (2018). Flightless scaly-tailed squirrels never learned how to fly : a reappraisal of Anomaluridae phylogeny. Zoologica Scripta, 47 (4), p. 404-417. ISSN 0300-3256.

Titre du document
Flightless scaly-tailed squirrels never learned how to fly : a reappraisal of Anomaluridae phylogeny
Année de publication
2018
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000437704400003
Auteurs
Fabre P. H., Tilak M. K., Denys C., Gaubert Philippe, Nicolas V., Douzery E. J. P., Marivaux L.
Source
Zoologica Scripta, 2018, 47 (4), p. 404-417 ISSN 0300-3256
Anomaluroidea, commonly known as the scaly-tailed squirrels, are an emblematic group of tropical African mammals that includes gliding forms. The family Anomaluridae was until recently represented by three genera: the flying scaly-tailed squirrels (Anomalurus), the flying mouse (Idiurus) and the flightless scaly-tailed squirrels (Zenkerella). Idiurus and Zenkerella have long been grouped into the Zenkerellinae subfamily, and Zenkerella was interpreted as a rare case of evolutionary reversal to non-gliding lifestyle. Recent studies have demonstrated that Zenkerella is sister to all other modern anomalurids, and represents in fact the monogeneric family Zenkerellidae. The Anomalurus genus was split into Anomalurus and Anomalurops, but no study has ever considered all Anomalurus species together in a phylogeny to test the status of Anomalurops. Here, we used mitogenomic next-generation sequencing to infer the phylogenetic relationships among all extant anomalurids and to estimate their divergence ages. We found that the arboreal Zenkerella is the sister group of all extant gliding anomalurids (Idiurus and Anomalurus). We confirmed that Anomaluroidea only evolved the gliding adaptation once. A comparison based on morphological traits indicates that Zenkerella harbours several unique morphological features. We propose new morphological characters for the novel classification of modern Anomaluroidea, which includes the families Zenkerellidae and Anomaluridae. Using different calibration schemes, we demonstrated that classical dating methods relying only on mitogenomes provide rather young Miocene estimates between Zenkerellidae and the Anomaluridae. The use of published nuclear genes, internal calibrations and tip dating converged towards an Eocene split between gliding and non-gliding scaly-tailed squirrels, which is in agreement with the African fossil record. Finally, we provide the first exhaustive species-level molecular phylogenetic inference for the genus Anomalurus. We found that Anomalurus beecrofti is the sister group of all other species of Anomalurus and branched off during the Miocene.
Plan de classement
Géologie et formations superficielles [064] ; Sciences du monde animal [080]
Description Géographique
AFRIQUE ; ZONE TROPICALE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010073632]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010073632
Contact