INVESTIGADORES
KRAMARZ Alejandro Gustavo
artículos
Título:
A mitogenomic timetree for Darwin's enigmatic South American mammal Macrauchenia patachonica
Autor/es:
WESTBURY, MICHAEL; BALEKA, SINA; BARLOW, AXEL; HARTMANN, STEFANIE; PAIJMANS, JOHANNA L.A.; KRAMARZ, ALEJANDRO; FORASIEPI, ANALÍA M; BOND, MARIANO; GELFO, JAVIER N.; REGUERO, MARCELO A.; LÓPEZ-MENDOZA, PATRICIO; TAGLIORETTI, MATIAS; SCAGLIA, FERNANDO; RINDERKNECHT, ANDRÉS; JONES, WASHINGTON; MENA, FRANCISCO; BILLET, GUILLAUME; DE MUIZON, CHRISTIAN; AGUILAR, JOSÉ LUIS; MACPHEE, ROSS D.E.; HOFREITER, MICHAEL
Revista:
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Editorial:
Nature Publishing Group
Referencias:
Año: 2017 vol. 8
ISSN:
2041-1723
Resumen:
The unusual mix of morphological traits displayed by extinct South American native ungulates (SANUs) confounded both Charles Darwin, who first discovered them, and Richard Owen, who tried to resolve their relationships. Here we report an almost complete mitochondrial genome for the litoptern Macrauchenia. Our dated phylogenetic tree places Macrauchenia as sister to Perissodactyla, but close to the radiation of major lineages within Laurasiatheria. This position is consistent with a divergence estimate of -1/466 Ma (95% credibility interval, 56.64-77.83 Ma) obtained for the split between Macrauchenia and other Panperissodactyla. Combined with their morphological distinctiveness, this evidence supports the positioning of Litopterna (possibly in company with other SANU groups) as a separate order within Laurasiatheria. We also show that, when using strict criteria, extinct taxa marked by deep divergence times and a lack of close living relatives may still be amenable to palaeogenomic analysis through iterative mapping against more distant relatives.