The Evolutionary History of Termites as Inferred from 66 Mitochondrial Genomes

Thomas Bourguignon(Hokkaido University), Nathan Lo(University of Sydney), Stephen L. Cameron(Queensland University of Technology), Jan Šobotník(Czech University of Life Sciences Prague), Yoshinobu Hayashi(University of Sydney), Shuji Shigenobu(National Institutes of Natural Sciences), Dai Watanabe(Hokkaido University), Yves Roisin(Université Libre de Bruxelles), Toru Miura(Hokkaido University), Theodore A. Evans(National University of Singapore)
Molecular Biology and Evolution
November 10, 2014
Cited by 325

Abstract

Termites have colonized many habitats and are among the most abundant animals in tropical ecosystems, which they modify considerably through their actions. The timing of their rise in abundance and of the dispersal events that gave rise to modern termite lineages is not well understood. To shed light on termite origins and diversification, we sequenced the mitochondrial genome of 48 termite species and combined them with 18 previously sequenced termite mitochondrial genomes for phylogenetic and molecular clock analyses using multiple fossil calibrations. The 66 genomes represent most major clades of termites. Unlike previous phylogenetic studies based on fewer molecular data, our phylogenetic tree is fully resolved for the lower termites. The phylogenetic positions of Macrotermitinae and Apicotermitinae are also resolved as the basal groups in the higher termites, but in the crown termitid groups, including Termitinae + Syntermitinae + Nasutitermitinae + Cubitermitinae, the position of some nodes remains uncertain. Our molecular clock tree indicates that the lineages leading to termites and Cryptocercus roaches diverged 170 Ma (153-196 Ma 95% confidence interval [CI]), that modern Termitidae arose 54 Ma (46-66 Ma 95% CI), and that the crown termitid group arose 40 Ma (35-49 Ma 95% CI). This indicates that the distribution of basal termite clades was influenced by the final stages of the breakup of Pangaea. Our inference of ancestral geographic ranges shows that the Termitidae, which includes more than 75% of extant termite species, most likely originated in Africa or Asia, and acquired their pantropical distribution after a series of dispersal and subsequent diversification events.


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