Search results for "parsimony"

showing 10 items of 20 documents

Molecular phylogeny of the families Campulidae and Nasitrematidae (Trematoda) based on mtDNA sequence comparison.

1998

Abstract Historically, the systematic arrangement of the genera within the family Campulidae, and its relationship with its allied family Nasitrematidae have been rather confused, particularly because only adult morphology has been available to classical taxonomic analysis. In this paper we provide a partial phylogeny of the genera of these families based on mtDNA from five campulid species: Campula oblonga, Zalophotrema atlanticum, Hadwenius tursionis, Oschmarinella rochebruni and ; and one nasitrematid, Nasitremaglobicephalae . Fasciola hepatica and Dicrocoelium dendriticum were used as outgroups. Maximum parsimony and neighbour-joining methods were applied. Both methods produced similar …

Mitochondrial DNAbiologyBase SequenceBiogeographyDicrocoelium dendriticumMolecular Sequence DataZoologyHelminth ProteinsSequence Analysis DNADNA Helminthbiology.organism_classificationDNA MitochondrialDigeneaMaximum parsimonyInfectious DiseasesPhylogeneticsMolecular phylogeneticsAnimalsParasitologyTaxonomy (biology)Amino Acid SequenceTrematodaSequence AlignmentPhylogenyInternational journal for parasitology
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The origin of Lecithodesmus (Digenea: Campulidae) based on ND3 gene comparison

2000

Species of Lecithodesmus (Campulidae) occur almost exclusively in baleen whales throughout a wide geographical distribution. Other campulids occur only in odontocetes and, secondarily, in pinnipeds and the sea otter. Therefore, the ancestor of Lecithodesmus might have either cospeciated with mysticetes during the early divergence of mysticete and odontocete cetaceans or originated later via host switching. We evaluate both possibilities based on a phylogenetic analysis. The ND3 mitochondrial gene sequence of a species of Lecithodesmus was included in a previous partial molecular phylogeny of the Campulidae. Fasciola hepatica and Dicrocoelium dendriticum were used as outgroups. Maximum parsi…

Molecular Sequence DataZoologyBiologyDNA MitochondrialDigeneaHost-Parasite InteractionsPhylogeneticsAdenine nucleotideAnimalsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyLikelihood FunctionsPhylogenetic treeBase SequenceWhalesNADH DehydrogenaseSequence Analysis DNADNA Helminthbiology.organism_classificationMaximum parsimonyBaleenB vitaminsMolecular phylogeneticsParasitologyTrematodaSequence Alignment
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Phylogenetic relationships of the family Campulidae (Trematoda) based on 18S rRNA sequences

1998

Traditionally, the family Campulidae has been associated either with the family Fasciolidae, parasites of ruminants, or the Acanthocolpidae, parasites of fishes, based on morphological similarities. Since morphology does not seem to resolve clearly the problem of the relationships of campulids, we have used the sequences of the 18S rRNA gene of the campulids Zalophotrema hepaticum, Campula oblonga and Nasitrema globicephalae, the fasciolid Fasciola hepatica, the acanthocolpid Stephanostomum baccatum and the outgroup Schistosoma mansoni to infer a phylogeny. Maximum parsimony and neighbour-joining methods were applied. Both methods indicated that campulids are closer to acanthocolpids than f…

Molecular Sequence DataZoologyHelminth geneticsPolymerase Chain ReactionDigeneaFasciolidaeHost-Parasite InteractionsPhylogeneticsSequence Homology Nucleic AcidRNA Ribosomal 18SAnimalsCluster AnalysisPhylogenyDNA PrimersMammalsBase SequencebiologyPhylogenetic treeFishesSchistosoma mansoniSequence Analysis DNADNA Helminthbiology.organism_classificationMaximum parsimonyInfectious DiseasesSister groupAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyTrematodaRNA HelminthEchinostomaSequence AlignmentParasitology
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Hidden Mediterranean diversity: Assessing species taxa by molecular phylogeny within the opilionid family Trogulidae (Arachnida, Opiliones)

2009

This is the first comprehensive study to evaluate the relationships between the western palearctic harvestman families Dicranolasmatidae, Trogulidae and Nemastomatidae with focus on the phylogeny and systematics of Trogulidae, using combined sequence data of the nuclear 28S rRNA and the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. Bayesian analysis and Maximum parsimony do not reliably resolve Dicranolasma as distinct family but place it on a similar phylogenetic level as several lineages of Trogulidae. Nemastomatidae and Trogulidae turned out to be monophyletic, as did genera Anelasmocephalus and Trogulus within the Trogulidae. The genera Calathocratus, Platybessobius and Trogulocratus each appeared p…

NemastomatidaeSystematicsbiologyPhylogenetic treeGenetic SpeciationZoologyBayes TheoremSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationDNA MitochondrialMaximum parsimonyEvolution MolecularMonophylyGenusPolyphylyArachnidaRNA Ribosomal 28SMolecular phylogeneticsGeneticsAnimalsSequence AlignmentMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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Molecular evidence for phylogenetic relationships among buntings and American sparrows (Emberizidae)

2001

To help clarify controversial phylogenetic relationships within the family Emberizidae, we sequenced 1238 bp of mitochondrial DNA from the cytochrome b gene and a flanking portion of ND5. Although the longspurs (Calcarius) and the snow buntings (Plectrophenax) have been grouped with the Old World buntings (Emberiza) in traditional classifications, our molecular phylogenies constructed with maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony place these general basal to a clade in which the Old World buntings and North American sparrows are sister groups. Contrary to the hypothesis that the radiation within Emberiza is recent following a westward expansion of emberizid stock into Eurasia from North Ame…

Old WorldbiologyPhylogenetic treeEcologyZoologyEmberizidaebiology.organism_classificationMaximum parsimonyGenetic divergenceSister groupAnimal Science and ZoologyPlectrophenaxEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEmberizaJournal of Avian Biology
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The Phylogenetic position of Daubentonia madagascariensis (Gmelin, 1788; primates, Strepsirhini) as revealed by chromosomal analysis

2012

One of the major topics in primate evolution is the phylogenetic position of the bizarre Daubentonia madagascariensis (DMA, aye-aye). The principal points that have been discussed for many decades are whether the aye-aye is: (i) the sister group of primates; (ii) the sister group of strepsirhines; or (iii) the sister group of lemurs. Very little is known about Daubentonia evolution, particularly on the chromosomal background. The present report focuses on the chromosomal history of this species. We used available chromosome painting data as the main source to identify conserved chromosomes, chromosomal segments and syntenic associations that have characterized the aye-aye karyotype. The dat…

Phylogenetic treeLineage (evolution)StrepsirhiniLemurKaryotypeDaubentonia Bayesian analysis Chromosomal evolution Phylogeny PrimatologyBiologySettore BIO/08 - AntropologiaMaximum parsimonyMonophylySister groupEvolutionary biologybiology.animalGeneticsGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences
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Phylogenetic relationship among genera of Polymorphidae (Acanthocephala), inferred from nuclear and mitochondrial gene sequences.

2013

Abstract Acanthocephalans of the family Polymorphidae Meyer, 1931 are obligate endoparasites with complex life cycles. These worms use vertebrates (marine mammals, fish-eating birds and waterfowl) as definitive hosts and invertebrates (amphipods, decapods and euphausiids) as intermediate hosts to complete their life cycle. Polymorphidae has a wordwide distribution, containing 12 genera, with approximately 127 species. The family is diagnosed by having a spinose trunk, bulbose proboscis, double-walled proboscis receptacle, and usually four to eight tubular cement glands. To conduct a phylogenetic analysis, in the current study sequences of the small (18S) and large-subunit (28S) ribosomal RN…

ProfilicollisZoologyBiologyAcanthocephalaPolymorphidaeElectron Transport Complex IVEvolution MolecularMonophylyPhylogeneticsRNA Ribosomal 28SGeneticsRNA Ribosomal 18SAnimalsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGenes HelminthPhylogenyLikelihood FunctionsPhylogenetic treeModels GeneticBayes Theorembiology.organism_classificationMaximum parsimonyGenes MitochondrialCladogramRNA HelminthAcanthocephalaMultilocus Sequence TypingMolecular phylogenetics and evolution
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BythinellaMoquin-Tandon, 1856 (Gastropoda: Rissooidea: Bythinellidae) in Romania: species richness in a glacial refugium

2009

Mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) and ribosomal internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS-1) sequences were analysed in 12 Romanian Bythinella populations. Phylogenetic relationships were inferred using maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood and Bayesian techniques. For COI, the Kimura two-parameter (K2P) distances and haplotype networks were computed. Two sympatric and four allopatric groups were distinguished. The K2P distances are similar to those for congeneric rissooids, so each of the six groups represents a species. Two are identified as Bythinella molcsanyi H. Wagner, 1941, and Bythinella dacica Grossu, 1946. The other four groups cannot be ascribed to any known Bythinella. The occur…

Refugium (population biology)biologyPhylogenetic treeSympatric speciationEcologyRissooideaAllopatric speciationZoologyBythinellaInternal transcribed spacerbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMaximum parsimonyJournal of Natural History
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A molecular phylogeny of ‘true’ salamanders (family Salamandridae) and the evolution of terrestriality of reproductive modes

2009

Key innovations enable species to conquer new habitats. Within the family Salamandridae, particular adaptations to terrestrial life, such as the anatomy and physiology of the feeding apparatus, courtship behaviour and in some cases viviparity, allowed the ‘true’salamanders (genera Chioglossa, Mertensiella, Salamandra) to shift from a semi-aquatic to a more terrestrial life cycle. We sequenced 423 base pairs of the 16S RNA gene of the mitochondrial DNA for all species of the ‘true’salamanders. Based on the resulting phylogeny we discuss the evolution of terrestrial reproductive modes within this species group. We especially tested two hypotheses of monophyletic origin of specific adaptations…

SalamandridaeZoologyBiologybiology.organism_classificationMaximum parsimonyMonophylySalamandra lanzaiMertensiella caucasicaMolecular phylogeneticsGeneticsAnimal Science and ZoologySalamandraSalamandra atraMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research
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An 18S rDNA-Based Molecular Phylogeny of Aphidiinae (Hymenoptera: Braconidae)

2000

We have obtained a molecular phylogeny of the subfamily Aphidiinae (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) by sequencing the 18S rDNA in 37 aphidiine taxa. Approximately 1857 nucleotides were sequenced in each species. Evolutionary relationships were established by comparing the results of maximum-parsimony, maximum-likelihood, and distance analyses. The most variable region of this gene, V4 (approx 403 nucleotides), was employed to establish the basality of the tribe Ephedrini within this subfamily. All phylogenetic reconstructions yielded trees with very similar topologies that confirmed the existence of two of the four traditionally accepted tribes, Ephedrini and Praini, but questioned the existence o…

SubfamilyBase SequencePhylogenetic treebiologyMolecular Sequence DataZoologyTribe (biology)biology.organism_classificationDNA RibosomalHymenopteraMaximum parsimonyEuropeGenusAphidsMolecular phylogeneticsGeneticsAnimalsAphidiinaeMolecular BiologyNeighbor joiningConserved SequencePhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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