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Author: Murrell, A.; Dobson, S. J.; Walter, D. E.;
Campbell, N. J. H.; Shao, R. F.; Barker, S. C.
Year: 2005
Title: Relationships among the three major lineages
of the Acari (Arthropoda : Arachnida) inferred from small subunit rRNA:
paraphyly of the parasitiformes with respect to the opilioacariformes and
relative rates of nucleotide substitution
Journal: Invertebrate Systematics
Volume: 19
Pages: 383-389
Abstract: We inferred phylogeny among the three major
lineages of the Acari ( mites) from the small subunit rRNA gene. Our phylogeny
indicates that the Opilioacariformes is the sister-group to the
Ixodida+Holothyrida, not the Ixodida+Mesostigmata+Holothyrida, as previously
thought. Support for this relationship increased when sites with the highest
rates of nucleotide substitution, and thus the greatest potential for
saturation with nucleotide substitutions, were removed. Indeed, the increase in
support ( and resolution) was despite a 70% reduction in the number of
parsimony-informative sites from 408 to 115. This shows that rather than
'noisy' sites having no impact on resolution of deep branches, 'noisy' sites
have the potential to obscure phylogenetic relationships. The arrangement,
Ixodida+Holothyrida+Opilioacariformes, however, may be an artefact of
long-branch attraction since relative-rate tests showed that the Mesostigmata
have significantly faster rates of nucleotide substitution than other parasitiform
mites. Thus, the fast rates of nucleotide substitution of the Mesostigmata
might have caused the Mesostigmata to be attracted to the outgroup in our
trees. We tested the hypothesis that the high rate of nucleotide substitution
in some mites was related to their short generation times. The Acari species
that have high nucleotide substitution rates usually have short generation
times; these mites also tend to be more active and thus have higher metabolic
rates than other mites. Therefore, more than one factor may affect the rate of
nucleotide substitution in these mites.
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