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A timescale for the evolution of lice. Vincent S. Smith. with Tom Ford, Kevin Johnson, Paul Johnson, Kazunori Yoshizawa, and Jessica E. Light. GENBANK (June 2011). 68 spp. (15%) 18 Genera 1427 seq. +29 seq.*. Anoplura. 1 spp. (33%) 1 Genus 12 seq. +3 seq.*. Rhynchophthirina.
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A timescale for the evolution of lice Vincent S. Smith with Tom Ford, Kevin Johnson, Paul Johnson, Kazunori Yoshizawa, and Jessica E. Light
GENBANK (June 2011) 68 spp. (15%) 18 Genera 1427 seq. +29 seq.* Anoplura 1 spp. (33%) 1 Genus 12 seq. +3 seq.* Rhynchophthirina 509 spp. (17%) 95 Genera 2264 seq. +285 seq.* Ischnocera 134 spp. (10%) 37 Genera 326 seq. +29 seq.* Amblycera 286 spp. 113 Genera 1218 seq. +478 seq.* *Change since Feb. 2010 http://phylota.net/ [ “Psocoptera”] Louse phylogeny (eight years on…) • 60+ phylogenies! (circa 25 in 2003) • One full genome (more coming) • Now cover 90% of louse genera • Mix of molecules & morphology • Beginning to reconcile differences • Very unusual mit. & nuclear genome • New questions emerging via next gen.
Why deep branch louse phylogeny is important? • Permanent obligate parasites • Model for cospeciation studies at different scales • Has ecological replicates • Opportunity to identify ancestral host • Tied to origin of feathers and hair • Need to date the origin of lice
P s o c o p t e r a • Parasite of Anseriformes or Charadriiformes • Crown group position • Suggests lice are very old • Points to a long coevolutionary history with birds • Useful molecular calibration point • Collected Eckfeld maar near Eifel, Germany • Middle Eocene (Middle Lutetian, 44.3±0.4 Ma) • First fossil louse • Completes ordinal representation of fossil insects • Excellent preservation • Phylogenetic affinities with modern feather lice R i c i n i d a e L a e m o b o t h r i i d a e B o o p i i d a e D e n n y u s - c o m p l e x A u s t r o m e n o p o n - c o m p l e x M e n a c a n t h u s / M e n o p o n - c o m p l e x C o l p o c e p h a l u m - c o m p l e x First fossil louse Wappler, Smith & Dalgleish Proc. R. Soc., 2004.
Not fossil lice! “Amblyceropsis indica” Kumar (2004) “Anopluropsis khatamaensis” Kumar (2004) considered a mite by Dalgleish, Palma, Price, & Smith 2006 considered an orbatid mite by Dalgleish, Palma, Price, & Smith 2006 fused head and thorax (cephalothorax)
Not fossil lice! Saurodectes vrsanski Rasnitsyn & Zherikhin (1999) “insect of uncertain ordinal affinities” by Grimaldi and Engel 2005 &Dalgleish, Palma, Price, & Smith 2006 pterosaur louse !
Character change Molecular dating • Build a tree
= time Molecular dating • Build a tree
Now Age of lice Molecular dating • Build a tree • Test for molecular clock
Now Age of lice Molecular dating • Build a tree • Test for molecular clock Rates of evolution vary
Molecular dating • Build a tree • Test for molecular clock • Apply calibrations
Now Age of lice Molecular dating • Build a tree • Test for molecular clock • Apply calibrations • Smooth rates across the tree • R8s with Penalized Likelihood (Sanderson, 2003) • Multidivtime (Thorne et al, 1998) • BEAST (Drummond et al, 2006)
100 Ma min. Fossil Liposcelid booklouse (Grimaldi & Engel 2006) 44 Ma min. 4.75 - 30 Ma Fossil Megamenopon louse Last extant gopher fossil - (Wrappler et al 2004) gophers split from relatives (Russel 1968) 19.8 Ma min. • Bayesian Analysis (MrBayes) Base of the Columbidae (fossil) (Benton 1993) - 4 chains, 10 million generations • Recovers classical louse phlogeny 37 - 53.25 Ma Oldest fossil Diomedeidae- Oldest fossil Procellariform (Benton 1993) 49 Ma min. Oldest Pelicaniform fossil (Mayr 2002) 20 - 25 Ma Old World Monkeys & apes (Reed et al 2004) 5-7 Ma Chimpanzees & humans (Reed et al 2004) Louse phylogeny Amblycera • 3 Genes (COI, EF1, 18s) Ischnocera • No molecular clock Rhynchophthirina • Eight calibration points Anoplura
44 Myr Fossil louse, Megamenopon (Wappler et al 2004) Louse phylogeny Fossil Louse
19.8 Myr Base of the Columbidae (fossil) (Benton 1993) Louse phylogeny Dove-Louse Cospeciation
Louse phylogeny Albatross-Louse Cospeciation Parasites: Feather Lice Hosts: Albatrosses 37 - 53 Ma Range for Diomedeidae based on fossils (Benton ed. 1993)
Louse phylogeny Chimpanzee-human louse cospeciation 5-7 Ma Fossil & Molecular data (Reed et al 2004)
Louse phylogeny Old World Monkeys - Apes cospeciation 20-25 Ma Fossil & Molecular data (Reed et al 2004)
130 Myr KT 161 105 100 Ma min. Fossil Liposcelid booklouse (Grimaldi & Engel 2006) Amblycera Ischnocera Anoplura 79 Ma 74 Ma 98 Ma (53-98 Ma) (74-125 Ma) (57-102 Ma) 44 Ma min. 4.75 - 30 Ma Fossil Megamenopon louse Last extant gopher fossil - (Wrappler et al 2004) gophers split from relatives (Russel 1968) 19.8 Ma min. Base of the Columbidae (fossil) (Benton 1993) 37 - 53.25 Ma Oldest fossil Diomedeidae- Oldest fossil Procellariform (Benton 1993) Rhynchophthirina 49 Ma min. Oldest Pelicaniform fossil (Mayr 2002) 20 - 25 Ma Old World Monkeys & apes (Reed et al 2004) 5-7 Ma Chimpanzees & humans (Reed et al 2004) 100 Myr 0 Louse phylogeny
130 Myr KT 161 105 Anoplura Amblycera Ischnocera 79 Ma 74 Ma 98 Ma (57-102 Ma) (74-125 Ma) (53-98 Ma) • Lice are approx. 130 Ma - 161 - 105 Ma, 95% conf. intervals • Major louse radiation • Three main clades of lice • Lice and hosts must have before the KT boundary a long shared history parasitizing mammals Rhynchophthirina 100 Myr 0 Louse phylogeny
Birds Marsupials Placental Mammals feathers hair Did lice radiate with feathers? Host implications • Mammal lice are young • Lice radiated on birds first • These groups colonized mammals What were the first louse hosts?
Summary • Just one fossil louse, but.. • Many other calibration points • Lice are approx. 130 Ma old • Radiated before dinosaurs when extinct • First radiated on the lineage leading to birds • Either modern birds are older than we think, or… • Perhaps the bird-like Theropod dinosaurs had lice? • Radiated in response to the evolution of feathers?
Press Smith et al 2011. Multiple lineages of lice pass through the K–Pg boundary. Biology Letters doi:10.1098/rsbl.2011.0105