Litcius/Paper detail

Phylogenomics of weevils revisited: data curation and modelling compositional heterogeneity

Yanda Li, Michael S. Engel, Erik Tihelka, Chenyang Cai

2023Biology Letters14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Weevils represent one of the most prolific radiations of beetles and the most diverse group of herbivores on land. The phylogeny of weevils (Curculionoidea) has received extensive attention, and a largely satisfactory framework for their interfamilial relationships has been established. However, a recent phylogenomic study of Curculionoidea based on anchored hybrid enrichment (AHE) data yielded an abnormal placement for the family Belidae (strongly supported as sister to Nemonychidae + Anthribidae). Here we reanalyse the genome-scale AHE data for Curculionoidea using various models of molecular evolution and data filtering methods to mitigate anticipated systematic errors and reduce compositional heterogeneity. When analysed with the infinite mixture model CAT-GTR or using appropriately filtered datasets, Belidae are always recovered as sister to the clade (Attelabidae, (Caridae, (Brentidae, Curculionidae))), which is congruent with studies based on morphology and other sources of molecular data. Although the relationships of the 'higher Curculionidae' remain challenging to resolve, we provide a consistent and robust backbone phylogeny of weevils. Our extensive analyses emphasize the significance of data curation and modelling across-site compositional heterogeneity in phylogenomic studies.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPhylogenomicsCurculionidaeCladePhylogeneticsEvolutionary biologyEcologyGeneticsGeneColeoptera Taxonomy and DistributionForest Insect Ecology and ManagementScarabaeidae Beetle Taxonomy and Biogeography