Resolution of the Early Placental Mammal Radiation Using Bayesian Phylogenetics

William J. Murphy(National Cancer Institute), Eduardo Eizirik(National Cancer Institute), Stephen J. O’Brien(National Cancer Institute), Ole Madsen(Radboud University Nijmegen), Mark Scally(University of California, Riverside), Christophe J. Douady(University of California, Riverside), Emma C. Teeling(University of California, Riverside), Oliver A. Ryder(Zoological Society of San Diego), Michael J. Stanhope(Queen's University Belfast), Wilfried W. de Jong(Radboud University Nijmegen), Mark S. Springer(University of California, Riverside)
Science
December 14, 2001
Cited by 1,302

Abstract

Molecular phylogenetic studies have resolved placental mammals into four major groups, but have not established the full hierarchy of interordinal relationships, including the position of the root. The latter is critical for understanding the early biogeographic history of placentals. We investigated placental phylogeny using Bayesian and maximum-likelihood methods and a 16.4-kilobase molecular data set. Interordinal relationships are almost entirely resolved. The basal split is between Afrotheria and other placentals, at about 103 million years, and may be accounted for by the separation of South America and Africa in the Cretaceous. Crown-group Eutheria may have their most recent common ancestry in the Southern Hemisphere (Gondwana).


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