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An evolutionary timescale for terrestrial isopods and a lack of molecular support for the monophyly of Oniscidea (Crustacea: Isopoda)
Authors:Luana S F Lins  Simon Y W Ho  Nathan Lo
Institution:1.School of Life and Environmental Sciences,The University of Sydney,Camperdown,Australia;2.Australian Museum,Sydney,Australia;3.School of Biological Sciences,Washington State University,Pullman,USA
Abstract:The marine metazoan fauna first diversified in the early Cambrian, but terrestrial environments were not colonized until at least 100 million years later. Among the groups of organisms that successfully colonized land is the crustacean order Isopoda. Of the 10,000 described isopod species, ~ 3,600 species from the suborder Oniscidea are terrestrial. Although it is widely thought that isopods colonized land only once, some studies have failed to confirm the monophyly of Oniscidea. To infer the evolutionary relationships among isopod lineages, we conducted phylogenetic analyses of nuclear 18S and 28S and mitochondrial COI genes using maximum-likelihood and Bayesian methods. We also analyzed a second data set comprising all of the mitochondrial protein-coding genes from a smaller sample of isopod taxa. Based on our analyses using a relaxed molecular clock, we dated the origin of terrestrial isopods at 289.5 million years ago (95% credibility interval 219.6–358.9 million years ago). These predate the known fossil record of these taxa and coincide with the formation of the supercontinent Pangaea and with the diversification of vascular plants on land. Our results suggest that the terrestrial environment has been colonized more than once by isopods. The monophyly of the suborder Oniscidea was not supported in any of our analyses, conflicting with classical views based on morphology. This draws attention to the need for further work on this group of isopods.
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