Abstract

Our understanding of the evolutionary history of primates is undergoing continual revision due to ongoing genome sequencing efforts. Bolstered by growing fossil evidence, these data have led to increased acceptance of once controversial hypotheses regarding phylogenetic relationships, hybridization and introgression, and the biogeographical history of primate groups. Among these findings is a pattern of recent introgression between species within all major primate groups examined to date, though little is known about introgression deeper in time. To address this and other phylogenetic questions, here, we present new reference genome assemblies for 3 Old World monkey (OWM) species: Colobus angolensis ssp. palliatus (the black and white colobus), Macaca nemestrina (southern pig-tailed macaque), and Mandrillus leucophaeus (the drill). We combine these data with 23 additional primate genomes to estimate both the species tree and individual gene trees using thousands of loci. While our species tree is largely consistent with previous phylogenetic hypotheses, the gene trees reveal high levels of genealogical discordance associated with multiple primate radiations. We use strongly asymmetric patterns of gene tree discordance around specific branches to identify multiple instances of introgression between ancestral primate lineages. In addition, we exploit recent fossil evidence to perform fossil-calibrated molecular dating analyses across the tree. Taken together, our genome-wide data help to resolve multiple contentious sets of relationships among primates, while also providing insight into the biological processes and technical artifacts that led to the disagreements in the first place.

Highlights

  • Understanding the history of individual genes and whole genomes is an important goal for evolutionary biology

  • For gene concordance factor (gCF), we found no correlation with node age (r2 = 0.0094), while site concordance factor (sCF) were slightly negatively correlated (r 2 = 0.2998; S3 Fig)

  • While the species tree topologies produced by these studies are nearly identical to the one recovered in our analysis, the limited number of loci meant that it was difficult to assess gene tree discordance accurately

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the history of individual genes and whole genomes is an important goal for evolutionary biology. There are already 23 species with published reference genome sequences and associated annotations (S1 Table), as well as multiple species with population samples of whole genomes [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. These data can be used to address important evolutionary questions

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