Abstract

Although modern morphological and molecular analyses support the monophyly of the Australasian marsupial order Dasyuromorphia, there is much less certainty about relationships among its constituent families (Dasyuridae, Myrmecobiidae, and Thylacinidae). While most authors regard Dasyuridae as monophyletic, a few have suggested that thylacines, numbats, or both have their closest relatives among dasyurids. Recent morphocladistic studies have identified several basicranial characters as putative synapomorphies of dasyurids, but no features that clearly implicate thylacinids, myrmecobiids, or both, as the sister group of Dasyuridae. Only two previous DNA studies have included both thylacine and numbat sequences along with dasyurids, and neither provided strong resolution of interfamilial relationships. In this study, we report a more thorough analytical treatment of complete cytochrome b, 12S rRNA, and protamine P1 gene sequences from dasyuromorphians than has heretofore been attempted. Our results concur with previous morphological studies in showing that Dasyuridae is monophyletic and with immunological findings that thylacinids and dasyurids are sister groups, apart from myrmecobiids. However, the level of support for nodes is highly dependent on the method of phylogenetic analysis employed. Our results also suggest that partitioning of sequence data sets to account for substitutional heterogeneity within and among genes does not necessarily lead to a major reduction in the precision of estimated phylogenies.

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