The origin of modern amphibians: a re‐evaluation |
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Authors: | TROND SIGURDSEN DAVID M GREEN |
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Institution: | 1. Département de sciences biologiques, Université de Montréal, Quebec, Canada;2. Redpath Museum, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
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Abstract: | There are currently three competing hypotheses seeking to explain the evolutionary origins of modern amphibians. The lepospondyl hypothesis holds that the lysorophian lepospondyls constitute the sister taxon to all lissamphibians. The temnospondyl hypothesis suggests that modern amphibians are most closely related to the dissorophoid temnospondyls. Finally, the polyphyletic hypothesis posits that the modern amphibian orders have separate evolutionary origins from among different groups of Palaeozoic tetrapods. Here, we review the character matrices used in previous studies. These data sets differ significantly in choice of characters. Therefore, we built a matrix based on data from all three hypotheses and analysed key taxa phylogenetically using both Bayesian inference and parsimony. Uncorrected, the supermatrix yielded inconclusive results, demonstrating the presence of at least two phylogenetic optima. When the data were corrected according to new observations on Doleserpeton, Eocaecilia, and other fossil forms, the phylogeny supported the temnospondyl hypothesis of lissamphibian origins. This conclusion is also supported by a careful study of character changes in the individual lineages. © 2011 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2011, 162 , 457–469. |
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Keywords: | lepospondyli lissamphibia phylogeny supermatrix temnospondyli |
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