Abstract

BackgroundUltraconserved elements (UCEs) have been successfully used in phylogenomics for a variety of taxa, but their power in phylogenetic inference has yet to be extensively compared with that of traditional Sanger sequencing data sets. Moreover, UCE data on invertebrates, including insects, are sparse. We compared the phylogenetic informativeness of 959 UCE loci with a multi-locus data set of ten nuclear markers obtained via Sanger sequencing, testing the ability of these two types of data to resolve and date the evolutionary history of the second most species-rich subfamily of ants in the world, the Formicinae.ResultsPhylogenetic analyses show that UCEs are superior in resolving ancient and shallow relationships in formicine ants, demonstrated by increased node support and a more resolved phylogeny. Phylogenetic informativeness metrics indicate a twofold improvement relative to the 10-gene data matrix generated from the identical set of taxa. We were able to significantly improve formicine classification based on our comprehensive UCE phylogeny. Our divergence age estimations, using both UCE and Sanger data, indicate that crown-group Formicinae are older (104–117 Ma) than previously suggested. Biogeographic analyses infer that the diversification of the subfamily has occurred on all continents with no particular hub of cladogenesis.ConclusionsWe found UCEs to be far superior to the multi-locus data set in estimating formicine relationships. The early history of the clade remains uncertain due to ancient rapid divergence events that are unresolvable even with our genomic-scale data, although this might be largely an effect of several problematic taxa subtended by long branches. Our comparison of divergence ages from both Sanger and UCE data demonstrates the effectiveness of UCEs for dating analyses. This comparative study highlights both the promise and limitations of UCEs for insect phylogenomics, and will prove useful to the growing number of evolutionary biologists considering the transition from Sanger to next-generation sequencing approaches.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12862-015-0552-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Ultraconserved elements (UCEs) have been successfully used in phylogenomics for a variety of taxa, but their power in phylogenetic inference has yet to be extensively compared with that of traditional Sanger sequencing data sets

  • We further selected a data set of 100 loci with the best average bootstrap support for subsequent dating analyses (UCE100best), because this represented a manageable size for BEAST

  • We compared the phylogenetic informativeness of a 10nuclear-gene data set produced by Sanger sequencing with a next-generation, phylogenomic data set of nearly 1000 UCE loci

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Summary

Introduction

Ultraconserved elements (UCEs) have been successfully used in phylogenomics for a variety of taxa, but their power in phylogenetic inference has yet to be extensively compared with that of traditional Sanger sequencing data sets. Core UCEs are sequenced together with their more variable flanking regions, producing markers for phylogenetic reconstruction [5, 6] This method has been adapted and applied to insects, informing family-level relationships among Hymenoptera (bees, ants and wasps) [7]. We address an unresolved phylogenetic problem by simultaneously generating both UCE and traditional Sanger-sequenced data for the same 82 ant species, estimating and directly comparing phylogenies separately produced by each source of information. Many biologists require such an applied comparison as they evaluate the costs and benefits of next-generation techniques over Sanger sequencing in advance of the data collection phases of their projects

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