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The colonization of land by animals: molecular phylogeny and divergence times among arthropods
Authors:Davide Pisani   Laura L Poling   Maureen Lyons-Weiler  S Blair Hedges
Affiliation:(1) NASA Astrobiology Institute and Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA;(2) Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, 44 Binney Street, Boston, MA 02115, USA;(3) Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh Medical School, 5230 Centre Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, USA
Abstract:

Background  

The earliest fossil evidence of terrestrial animal activity is from the Ordovician, ~450 million years ago (Ma). However, there are earlier animal fossils, and most molecular clocks suggest a deep origin of animal phyla in the Precambrian, leaving open the possibility that animals colonized land much earlier than the Ordovician. To further investigate the time of colonization of land by animals, we sequenced two nuclear genes, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and enolase, in representative arthropods and conducted phylogenetic and molecular clock analyses of those and other available DNA and protein sequence data. To assess the robustness of animal molecular clocks, we estimated the deuterostome-arthropod divergence using the arthropod fossil record for calibration and tunicate instead of vertebrate sequences to represent Deuterostomia. Nine nuclear and 15 mitochondrial genes were used in phylogenetic analyses and 61 genes were used in molecular clock analyses.
Keywords:
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