Abstract
The Cuban solenodon (Solenodon cubanus) is one of the most enigmatic mammals and is an extremely rare species with a distribution limited to a small part of the island of Cuba. Despite its rarity, in 2012 seven individuals of S. cubanus were captured and sampled successfully for DNA analysis, providing new insights into the evolutionary origin of this species and into the origins of the Caribbean fauna, which remain controversial. We conducted molecular phylogenetic analyses of five nuclear genes (Apob, Atp7a, Bdnf, Brca1 and Rag1; total, 4,602 bp) from 35 species of the mammalian order Eulipotyphla. Based on Bayesian relaxed molecular clock analyses, the family Solenodontidae diverged from other eulipotyphlan in the Paleocene, after the bolide impact on the Yucatan Peninsula, and S. cubanus diverged from the Hispaniolan solenodon (S. paradoxus) in the Early Pliocene. The strikingly recent divergence time estimates suggest that S. cubanus and its ancestral lineage originated via over-water dispersal rather than vicariance events, as had previously been hypothesised.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
As a natural laboratory, the Caribbean islands have garnered considerable attention worldwide because of their unique biogeographic features that have contributed to our understanding of organismal evolution1,2. In particular, the species assembly rule of Caribbean biota has been a subject of intensive research and discussion. Since the early 20th century, there have been long-standing debates between vicariance and dispersal mechanisms of origin for the Caribbean species assembly2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10. The most heated argument has been whether land bridges between the Caribbean islands and nearby continents in the Cenozoic Era contributed to the colonisation of organisms onto the islands. Previous geological studies proposed the GAARlandia hypothesis, in which a land bridge was formed between the Greater Antilles (Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica and Puerto Rico) and South America via the Aves Ridge (AR) around 33–35 Ma (mega annum)7,11. Supporting evidence for GAARlandia has been obtained for various species9,12,13,14,15,16; however, these studies did not provide exclusive support for this hypothesis, either because dispersal can also explain the results9,12,13,15, or the data do not precisely coincide with the time scale of GAARlandia (33–35 Ma)14,16. However, most empirical studies on vertebrate species have supported the over-water dispersal hypothesis for the origin of West Indian biota4,6,10,17,18, rather than overland dispersal and subsequent vicariance in GAARlandia. In addition, a vicariant event unrelated to the GAARlandia hypothesis has been suggested for freshwater cichlid fish species between the Greater Antilles and the Yucatan Peninsula in Central America19. Therefore, the colonisation mechanism of the Caribbean biota remains elusive, and a generalisation of the species establishment process is unresolved.
The Cuban solenodon or almiquí (Solenodon cubanus) is a large insectivore (Fig. 1) and an endangered species isolated on the island of Cuba20. It is listed as Endangered B1ab(iii,v) on the IUCN Red List, indicating that its distribution is severely fragmented in several limited locations and the population continues to decline21,22. Moreover, the capture record of live solenodons is extremely poor, making this species one of the most enigmatic mammals worldwide. Therefore, basic biological data are required for their conservation. Together with the Hispaniolan solenodon (S. paradoxus), these two extant species constitute the family Solenodontidae in the order Eulipotyphla23. Because the fossil record of Solenodontidae, especially the genus Solenodon24, is limited, the evolution and systematic relationships within Eulipotyphla cannot be accurately investigated without access to living solenodon individuals. Clarifying the establishment process of this species in Cuba could contribute to resolving the Caribbean faunal assembly rule.
There have been only a few investigations into the origin of the Cuban solenodon. The divergence time between the Cuban and Hispaniolan solenodons was estimated to be 25 Ma (95% credibility interval [CI] = 16–38 Ma) based on a molecular chronological analysis of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) using old museum specimens25. Roca et al.25 indicated that there is consistency between the molecular estimate and geological evidence that the separation between Cuba and Hispaniola occurred at 25–27 Ma7 and suggested that the two solenodon species could have originated via a vicariance event. However, there are two problems with their conclusion. First, the geological evidence has been updated and it was inferred that the separation between these two islands occurred ~16 Ma11, which does not support their molecular estimate of 25 Ma, although the 95% CI marginally covers 16 Ma25. Second, only mtDNA was examined in their study on the Cuban solenodon, despite using multiple nuclear DNA (nucDNA) genes for other eulipotyphlan species. Dating old divergences with mtDNA is known to be problematic because of the rapid evolutionary rate of mtDNA26. It is well known that genetic analyses of old museum samples are difficult due to the degraded state of the DNA samples, especially for nucDNA genes27. Under such conditions, only mtDNA with large copy numbers have been examined. The more slowly evolving nucDNA would provide better insight into the time scale of solenodon evolution; however, to analyse nucDNA, fresh tissue samples are necessary. Recently, we successfully obtained fresh tissue samples of the rare Cuban solenodon (see Methods), which allowed for nucDNA sequence analyses.
For the phylogenetic and chronological analyses in this study, we used five exon regions of slowly evolving nucDNA genes (Apob, apolipoprotein B; Atp7a, ATPase, Cu++ transporting, alpha polypeptide; Bdnf, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; Brca1, breast cancer 1, early onset; Rag1, recombination activating gene 1), all of which have been used in previous molecular systematic studies of mammals25,28,29,30,31. Our analysis of the phylogenetic relationships and divergence times using a molecular supermatrix composed of the five nuclear gene exon sequences provided evidence supporting over-water dispersal, rather than vicariance, for the origin of the family Solenodontidae in the Paleocene and the Cuban solenodon in the Early Pliocene.
Results and Discussion
Origin of Solenodontidae
The supermatrix phylogenetic analyses of five exon regions of nucDNA genes (total, 4,602 bp) demonstrated that Solenodontidae diverged first among the four families of Eulipotyphla (Solenodontidae, Erinaceidae, Soricidae and Talpidae23; Fig. 1 and Supplementary Fig. S1; bootstrap proportion = 70, posterior probability = 0.93), followed by Talpidae, with Erinaceidae and Soricidae forming a clade. This is congruent with one previous study25, but contradicts another supporting a phylogenetic affinity between Soricidae and Talpidae using 26 nuclear genes (total, 35,603 bp)31. Despite the difference in some of the inter-familial relationships, the basal position of Solenodontidae was robust for the examined gene sequences among these studies, including ours. Conversely, previous studies might have encountered the long-branch attraction (LBA)32 problem because only one or two representative species of each family separated by long branches were examined. For the phylogenetic and chronological analyses of this study, we sampled all four families in Eulipotyphla and all of the subfamilies in each family, where available (Erinaceinae and Galericinae in Erinaceidae, Crocidurinae and Soricinae in Soricidae, and Scalopinae, Talpinae, and Uropsilinae in Talpidae; Supplementary Table S1). Using this sampling procedure, we conducted analyses using all of the major lineages in Eulipotyphla at the subfamilial level, making the phylogenetic analyses less vulnerable to the LBA problem for inter-familial relationships. Therefore, our analyses using all subfamilial lineages largely strengthened the hypothesis of the basal branching of Solenodontidae and the close affinity of Erinaceidae and Soricidae. The phylogenetic inconsistency between this study and that by Meredith et al.31 and the very short branch lengths among the four major families in the chronogram (Fig. 1) suggest that rapid cladogenesis within a short evolutionary period was involved in these divergences; thus, further data are required for complete resolution of the inter-familial phylogenetic relationships.
The vicariance and dispersal hypotheses have been intensively debated as the origin of Solenodontidae. In recent molecular phylogenetic studies, the emergence of the ancestral lineage of Solenodontidae was inferred to have occurred in the late Cretaceous period (76 Ma [95% CI = 72–81 Ma] in Roca et al.25; 77.3 Ma [95% CI = 70.7–85.8 Ma] in Meredith et al.31), which is chronologically consistent with the previous supposition that vicariance and subsequent restriction to the proto-Antilles, located between North and South America (near current Central America), in the Late Cretaceous period6,33 generated the ancestral lineage of Solenodontidae10. This is not a new hypothesis, since Rosen33 depicted the hypothetical relative movements of the proto-Antilles northeastward from the region of the present Central America. However, palaeogeographical evidence is insufficient to support the proto-Antillean vicariance hypothesis6. Moreover, it seems implausible that ancestral solenodon populations could have survived the devastating impacts of the gigantic bolide on the Yucatan Peninsula (Chicxulub) at 65 Ma3,4,6,11,17, which was also a concern of Roca et al.25 in their discussion of the late Cretaceous divergence of Solenodontidae.
In this study, we tested the hypothesis of a Late Cretaceous origin of Solenodontidae with multiple fossil calibrations within Eulipotyphla34, which was accomplished using our extensive sampling strategy. Using only eulipotyphlan fossil calibrations, we obtained an estimate of 58.6 Ma (95% CI = 57.3–60.8 Ma) for the age of the most recent common ancestor (TMRCA) of Eulipotyphla (Fig. 1 and Supplementary Table S2; strategy [1]), which is later than the age of the bolide impact (65 Ma; Fig. 1). This estimate is also incongruent with the GAARlandia land bridge in the Eocene-Oligocene boundary period (33–35 Ma; Fig. 1). Therefore, it supports the possibility that early Cenozoic dispersal after the bolide impact, not Late Cretaceous proto-Antillean vicariance, produced the ancestral lineage of Solenodontidae as previously suggested4, although incomplete fossil records could promote underestimation of the divergence times. Supporting this, the North American origin of the over-water dispersal was suggested based on fossil evidence35. Such an over-water dispersal origin of extinct North American soricomorph relatives has been considered a possible explanation for the current relictual distribution of Solenodontidae7.
Furthermore, Cenozoic intra-ordinal divergence after the Cretaceous-Cenozoic boundary (65 Ma) is a common trend in mammalian diversification31. Interestingly, Phillips36 re-analysed the dataset of Meredith et al.31, taking into consideration the calibration and evolutionary rate errors among the major mammalian lineages, and produced a divergence time estimate for the TMRCA of Eulipotyphla, which is consistent with this study (59.1 Ma). Geologists have stated that the Greater Antilles was submerged until the Middle Eocene (ca 45 Ma)7,37, and early mammalian fossils in the region date back to the Oligocene22, which is incongruent with the hypothesis of the proto-Antillean vicariance in the late Cretaceous period. However, it is also inconsistent with our estimate for the origin of ancestral Solenodontidae (58.6 Ma [95% CI = 57.3–60.8 Ma]). Currently, the idea that the ancestor of Solenodontidae originated from another location by dispersal no earlier than 58.6 Ma (after the emergence of the Greater Antilles) and “relictualised” might be the best hypothesis explaining the absence of fossil traces of the major continental groups in these islands that would otherwise have dispersed through the land bridge7. Nevertheless, further independent molecular and palaeontological evidence or geological updates are necessary for more precise dating of the origin of Solenodontidae. Old divergences estimated in two previous studies may have been due to the use of completely or mostly non-eulipotyphlan fossils as calibration points in the estimation of divergence times among eulipotyphlan lineages25,31, as discussed in Phillips36. A recently published study also indicated a Late Cretaceous origin for Solenodontidae (78.7 Ma [95% CI = 62.1–98.6 Ma])38. However, this study used the same fossil constraints as those of Meredith et al.31. Therefore, the time estimate of the Late Cretaceous age might be another example of overestimation.
Origin of the Cuban solenodon
The Cuban solenodon formed a clade with the Hispaniolan solenodon (Fig. 1). This relationship was highly supported by the bootstrap value (100%) and posterior probability (1.0) in the maximum-likelihood (ML) and Bayesian-inference (BI) analyses, respectively (Fig. 1 and Supplementary Fig. S1). Although we used various calibration standards (see Methods), the divergence times between the Cuban and Hispaniolan solenodons estimated by the Bayesian relaxed molecular clock analysis were robust to the difference in calibrations, demonstrating that the two solenodons diverged in the Early Pliocene (3.7–4.8 Ma [95% CI = 2.6–6.4 Ma]; Supplementary Table S2). This estimate is incongruent with the previous estimate (25 Ma [95% CI = 16–38 Ma])25, which was used to suggest that the geological separation between Cuba and Hispaniola (25–27 Ma)7 would have led to the vicariance event between these species. Despite using 76 Ma for the basal divergence of the eulipotyphlan clade to compare the time scales between previous studies and our results (strategies [2] and [3]; see Methods), the basal divergence within Solenodontidae (S. cubanus versus S. paradoxus) was still estimated to have occurred in the Early Pliocene (4.6–4.8 Ma [95% CI = 3.1–6.4 Ma]; Supplementary Table S2), strikingly different from the previous estimate (25 Ma [95% CI = 16–38 Ma])25.
It could be argued that the use of mtDNA caused overestimations in the divergence times of Roca et al.25. Since mtDNA evolves much more rapidly than nucDNA, the saturation of substitutions becomes problematic when using mtDNA to estimate divergence times among distantly related species26. Saturation leads to underestimation of substitutions, resulting in overestimation of divergence times among younger lineages than the calibration points39. This could be the case for the previous mtDNA dating analysis25, in which the use of mtDNA was unavoidable because of the old museum samples of S. cubanus used for the genetic analyses. Therefore, the younger estimate obtained using the more slowly evolving nucDNA in this study is considered to be a reasonable time estimate and we conclude that the Cuban solenodon originated in the Early Pliocene. It should be noted that although there is a two-fold difference in the branch lengths between the Cuban and Hispaniolan solenodon lineages in the ML tree topology (Supplementary Fig. S1), it does not pose a major problem because of the robustness of the time estimate obtained using our drastically different calibration strategy. The difference between the Cuban and Hispaniolan solenodons is only 1.2% (56 of 4602 bp). This small difference might have stochastically affected the branch length variation.
The Early Pliocene origin of the Cuban solenodon supports over-water dispersal from Hispaniola as the mechanism for its origin on the island of Cuba for several reasons. First, there have been no geological reports that imply land connections between Cuba and Hispaniola later than the Early to Middle Miocene (16 Ma)11. Second, since the unidirectional ocean current around the Caribbean Sea flows northwestward from South America4, it is reasonable to assume that the Cuban lineage dispersed from Hispaniola, not the opposite. However, from a geological perspective, the present ocean surface current patterns have been suggested to be a feature of the last 4 million years7. Based on this argument, the over-water dispersal hypothesis has been criticised because the divergence was mostly dated to be >4 Ma4,7. Conversely, the estimate obtained in this study (3.7–4.8 Ma) is not contradicted by the geological evidence that the current ocean circulation was initiated in the Pliocene period7. Third, a number of studies have supported the over-water dispersal hypothesis as the origin of the West Indian biota, especially non-volant mammals, reptiles and amphibians4,6,17,18. Traditional examples for the over-water dispersal hypothesis have been provided by immunological-distance analysis5,6,17, whereby most of the origins of West Indian vertebrates are not concentrated in a particular period, implying little or no relation to specific geological land bridges. A recent empirical study using a museomics approach with next-generation sequencing technology supported the over-water dispersal of hutias (capromyine rodents with body sizes similar to solenodons) from South America40. In that study, Hispaniola was suggested as a source for the later diversification of hutias in the Greater Antilles and Bahamas, which is in agreement with the dispersal direction inferred for solenodons in this study. Additional supportive evidence for the over-water dispersal origin from other islands, continents, and even from Caribbean islands has accumulated recently for a variety of taxonomic groups in the West Indies, including Poitea and Erithalia plants41, pupfishes42, eleutherodactyline frogs43, Anolis lizards44, alsophiine racer snakes45, extinct oryzomyine rodents46, short-faced bats47 and platyrrhine primates48. Therefore, our case study of Solenodon provides additional support for the dispersal origin of Caribbean vertebrates. All available evidence in recent molecular phylogenetic studies has shown that smaller invertebrates and a few vertebrates support the hypotheses of GAARlandia (Selenops spiders12, butterflies15, orb-weaving spider16, cichlid fishes14, toads13) and other geological vicariance events (crickets49), while most vertebrates with relatively larger body sizes support the over-water dispersal as a major role in their origins, suggesting that the biological properties of species could have affected the over-water dispersal processes of West Indian biota. This is consistent with a previous study that found that more distant island voles are larger in size than mainland or less distant island voles50. This does not mean that smaller species were mostly affected by geological vicariance events, but rather that there may have been few survivors among smaller species in the high-risk passage of over-water dispersal.
Methods
Sample collection
The field survey was conducted in Alejandro de Humboldt National Park in the Republic of Cuba from March to April 2012, resulting in the capture of seven live Cuban solenodon individuals (Permit No. 03/2012 from the Cuban Environment Agency to collect DNA samples and export them to Japan, document available upon request). After collecting the data, all individuals were carefully released into their habitat. All methods followed the approved guidelines provided by the Mammal Society of Japan. Including these newly captured seven Cuban solenodons, the nucleotide sequences of five exon regions of nucDNA genes, Apob, Atp7a, Bdnf, Brca1 and Rag1, were examined for 35 species in the order Eulipotyphla (Supplementary Table S1). For the phylogenetic and chronological analyses, we obtained novel sequences from our experiments or downloaded previously determined sequences from the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank international DNA databases (Supplementary Table S1). Three species in the order Carnivora (the Japanese weasel, Mustela itatsi, the ermine or stoat, Mustela erminea, and the small Asian mongoose, Herpestes auropunctatus), one species in Scandentia (the northern tree shrew, Tupaia belangeri) and one species in Rodentia (the house mouse, Mus musculus) were used as outgroups in the phylogenetic analyses. Eulipotyphla and Carnivora were classified into the superorder Laurasiatheria, while the other Scandentia and Rodentia were classified into Euarchontoglires, the sister clade of Laurasiatheria31. These outgroups span taxonomically diverse groups and are expected to work well to fix the eulipotyphlan root.
Experimental techniques
Total genomic DNA was extracted from a piece of ear tissue using a standard phenol–chloroform method. All PCR reactions were performed with the KOD-Plus-NEO DNA Polymerase Kit (Toyobo, Osaka, Japan) in an automated thermal cycler (Life Touch thermal cycler, Bioer Technology, Hangzhou, China) using the following conditions: a 3-min denaturation period at 94 °C, 30 cycles of denaturation at 94 °C for 30 s, annealing at 50 °C for 30 s, extension at 68 °C for 90 s and a 10-min extension period at 68 °C. The PCR reaction mixture consisted of KOD-Plus-NEO buffer, 1.5 mM MgSO4, 0.2 mM of each dNTP, 0.3
Construction of the molecular supermatrix
Multiple alignments of the determined sequences were conducted for each locus through the program MUSCLE implemented in MEGA ver. 651. Then, we combined alignments of each locus into a single data matrix (supermatrix) containing 40 species and five nuclear gene sequences (Apob, 1,181 bp; Atp7a, 673 bp; Bdnf, 573 bp; Brca1, 1,071 bp; and Rag1, 1,104 bp; total, 4,602 bp). The supermatrix was composed of 230,100 taxon-by-character cells, where the number of missing cells was 73,351 (31.9%). Missing data were not relevant to the phylogenetic resolution, as the most important point in phylogenetic design is the informativeness of the collected data52,53. Even data matrices with >60% missing cells can provide a well-resolved phylogeny if there are informative sequences in the data matrix52.
Phylogenetic analyses
We adopted two probabilistic phylogenetic inference approaches, ML and BI, using the constructed molecular supermatrix. Before conducting these phylogenetic analyses, we inferred the best-fit partitioning scheme and substitution models using PartitionFinder ver. 1.1.154. Partitions were pre-defined by genes and codons (15 partitions; five genes and three codon positions), and the best partitioning scheme was explored using the greedy search and determined by the Bayesian information criterion. The best partitioning scheme supported two subsets of partitions, where SYM+G was selected for the first and second codon positions of the Bdnf and Rag1 genes, while GTR + I +
The BI phylogenetic analysis was conducted in MrBayes ver. 3.1.256. The best-fit substitution models were inferred as above. The model parameters were estimated during the analysis. Gene partitions were unlinked. The substitution rates were allowed to vary across partitions with the prset ratepr = variable option. We conducted two independent runs of Metropolis-coupled Markov-chain Monte Carlo (MCMC). Each run consisted of four Markov chains, one cold and three incrementally heated, starting from a random tree. The chains were run for 1 × 106 generations and sampled every 102 generations. The first 2.5 × 103 sampled trees (25%) were discarded because they were likely to have been sampled during the burn-in period where the posterior probability did not reach the stationary distribution. Tracer ver. 1.657 was used to check that the log likelihood (ln L) scores had converged on a stationary distribution. The average standard deviation of split frequencies was 0.001871, indicating convergence of Metropolis-coupled MCMC (<0.01 recommended in the instructions of MrBayes ver. 3.1.2).
Chronological analyses and fossil calibration points
The chronological analyses were conducted with the Bayesian uncorrelated lognormal relaxed-clock model implemented in BEAST ver. 1.6.257,58. The input file was generated in BEAUti ver. 1.6.257. The best-fit substitution models for each gene partition were the same as the BI phylogenetic analysis. The Yule process of speciation was set as a tree prior. Multiple fossil calibration points were set59,60. Our sampling of diverse familial and subfamilial lineages within Eulipotyphla permitted the use of multiple eulipotyphlan fossils for some families and subfamilies34. Roca et al.25 examined S. cubanus using only non-eulipotyphlan fossils as calibration points to estimate divergence times among eulipotyphlans, implying the possibility that the substitution rate in the eulipotyphlan lineages may not have been estimated accurately. This is because evolutionary rates differ among mammalian orders36, and the lineage-specific rate variations can strongly influence estimated divergence times31,36. Therefore, using non-eulipotyphlan fossils in the estimation of divergence times among eulipotyphlans is not preferable. In this study, according to the multiple fossil information34, we set 57–59, 37–49, 25–33 and 34–37 Ma as the TMRCA of the Erinaceidae-Soricidae, Erinaceidae, Soricidae and Talpinae-Scalopinae clades, respectively, as calibration points for each lineage, which are phylogenetically closer to the focal lineages than previously examined and reduce the effect of evolutionary rate variation. The minimum ages of the fossil time range (57, 37, 25 and 34, respectively) were set to the zero offset value of the lognormal distribution, assuming the minimum bound of each clade. The mean value was set to 1, 6, 4 and 1.5, respectively, where the mean took the mid-value of each fossil range (e.g., 6 = 43 [mid-value of 37 and 49] - 37). The standard deviations of the lognormal distributions were adjusted so that the 95% quantile took each maximum age (59, 49, 33 and 37, respectively). Hereafter, this calibration is ‘Assumption 1’. In addition, we used 76 Ma as the TMRCA of the Eulipotyphla clade, as estimated previously25. In addition, 76 Ma was used as the mean for the normal prior distribution, setting the standard deviation so that the 95% credible interval ranged from 75 to 77 Ma. Hereafter, this calibration is ‘Assumption 2’. In this study, we estimated the divergence times with three calibration strategies, [1] Assumption 1 only, [2] both Assumptions 1 and 2, and [3] Assumption 2 only. Strategy [1] tested the previous estimate of 76 Ma as the basal divergence time of Eulipotyphla without using 76 Ma as a calibration point. Strategy [3] assumed a similar time scale as Roca et al.25 to test the influence of the difference between mtDNA25 and nucDNA (this study) on the divergence times. Finally, using strategy [2], we used all available calibration standards. We conducted three independent MCMC runs of 1 × 107 generations in BEAST, where each parameter was sampled every 103 generations. The BEAST log file was assessed using Tracer 1.6 to confirm the parameter convergence to the stationary distribution and check the efficient sample size (ESS) for each parameter. The initial 25% of samples from each run were excluded as those from the burn-in period. Then, the post-burn-in samples from the three runs were combined. Most ESS values for the TMRCA parameters exceeded 200 (almost all >150), with a few exceptions of ESS <100 (Supplementary Table S2).
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Sato, J. J. et al. Molecular phylogenetic analysis of nuclear genes suggests a Cenozoic over-water dispersal origin for the Cuban solenodon. Sci. Rep. 6, 31173; doi: 10.1038/srep31173 (2016).
References
Woods, C. A. & Sergile, F. E. Biogeography of the West Indies – patterns and perspectives, 2nd edition. CRC Press, Florida, 582 pp (2001).
Ricklefs, R. & Bermingham, E. The West Indies as a laboratory of biogeography and evolution. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B. 363, 2393–2413 (2008).
Hedges, S. B. Vicariance and dispersal in Caribbean biogeography. Herpetologica 52, 466–473 (1996a).
Hedges, S. B. Historical biogeography of West Indian vertebrates. Annu. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 27, 163–196 (1996b).
Hedges, S. B. Biogeography of the West Indies: an overview. In ( Woods, C. A. & Sergile, F. E. Eds) Biogeography of the West Indies: patterns and perspectives. CRC Press, Boca Raton, pp. 15–33 (2001).
Hedges, S. B. Paleogeography of the Antilles and origin of West Indian terrestrial vertebrates. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 93, 231–244 (2006).
Iturralde-Vinent, M. A. & MacPhee, R. D. E. Paleogeography of the Caribbean region: implications for Cenozoic biogeography. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 238, 1–95 (1999).
MacPhee, R. D. E. & Iturralde, M. A. A short history of Greater Antillean land mammals: biogeography, paleogeography, radiations, and extinctions. Tropics 10, 145–154 (2000).
Dávalos, L. M. Phylogeny and biogeography of Caribbean mammals. Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 81, 373–394 (2004).
Ali, J. R. Colonizing the Caribbean: is the GAARlandia land-bridge hypothesis gaining a foothold? J. Biogeogr. 39, 431–433 (2012).
Iturralde-Vinent, M. A. Meso-Cenozoic Caribbean paleogeography: implications for the historical biogeography of the region. Int. Geol. Rev. 48, 791–827 (2006).
Crews, S. C. & Gillespie, R. G. Molecular systematics of Selenops spiders (Araneae: Selenopidae) from North and Central America: implications for Caribbean biogeography. Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 101, 288–322 (2010).
Alonso, R., Crawford, A. J. & Bermingham, E. Molecular phylogeny of an endemic radiation of Cuban toads (Bufonidae: Peltophryne) based on mitochondrial and nuclear genes. J. Biogeogr. 39, 434–451 (2012).
Říčan, O., Piálek, L., Zardoya, R., Doadrio, I. & Zrzavý J. Biogeography of the Mesoamerican Cichlidae (Teleostei: Heroini): colonization through the GAARlandia land bridge and early diversification. J. Biogeogr. 40, 579–593 (2013).
Matos-Maraví, P. et al. Causes of endemic radiation in the Caribbean: evidence from the historical biogeography and diversification of the butterfly genus Calisto (Nymphalidae: Satyrinae: Satyrini). BMC Evol. Biol. 14, 199 (2014).
McHugh, A., Yablonsky, C., Binford, G. & Agnarsson, I. Molecular phylogenetics of Caribbean Micrathena (Araneae: Araneidae) suggests multiple colonization events and single island endemism. Invertebr. Syst. 28, 337–349 (2014).
Hedges, S. B., Hass, C. A. & Maxon, L. R. Caribbean biogeography: molecular evidence for dispersal in West Indian terrestrial vertebrates. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89, 1909–1913 (1992).
Hass, C. A., Maxson, L. R. & Hedges, S. B. Relationships and divergence times of West Indian amphibians and reptiles: insights from albumin immunology. ( Woods, C. A. & Sergile, F. E. Eds) Biogeography of the West Indies: patterns and perspectives. CRC Press, Boca Raton, pp. 157–174 (2001).
Chakrabarty, P. Systematics and historical biogeography of Greater Antillean Cichlidae. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 39, 619–627 (2006).
Ottenwalder, J. A. Systematics and Biogeography of the West Indian genus Solenodon . In ( Woods, C. A. & Sergile, F. E. Eds) Biogeography of the West Indies: patterns and perspectives. CRC Press, Boca Raton, pp. 253–329 (2001).
Soy, J. & Mancina, C. A. Solenodon cubanus. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008: e.T20320A9185957. http://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T20320A9185957.en. Downloaded on 08 October 2015 (2008).
Silva-Taboada, G., Suárez Duque, W. & Díaz Franco, S. Compendio de los Mamíferos Terrestres Autóctonos de Cuba vivientes y Extinguidos. Museo Nacional de Historia Natural. Boloña Press, Habana, Cuba. 465 pp (2007).
Douady, C. J. & Douzery, E. J. P. Hedgehogs, shrews, moles, and solenodons (Eulipotyphla). In ( Hedges, S. B. & Kumar, S. eds.) The timetree of life, Oxford University Press, pp. 495–498 (2009).
MacPhee, R. D. E. ‘First’ appearances in the Cenozoic land-mammal record of the Greater Antilles: significance and comparison with South American and Antarctic records. J. Biogeogr. 32, 551–564 (2005).
Roca, A. L. et al. Mesozoic origin for west indian insectivores. Nature 429, 649–651 (2004).
Steppan, S. J., Adkins, R. M., Spinks, P. Q. & Hale, C. Multigene phylogeny of the Old World mice, Murinae, reveals distinct geographic lineages and the declining utility of mitochondrial genes compared to nuclear genes. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 37, 370–388 (2005).
Burrell, A. S., Disotell, T. R. & Bergey, C. M. The use of museum specimens with high-throughput DNA sequencers. J. Hum. Evol. 79, 35–44 (2015).
Madsen, O. et al. Parallel adaptive radiations in two major clades of placental mammals. Nature 409, 610–614 (2001).
Murphy, W. J. et al. Molecular phylogenetics and the origins of placental mammals. Nature 409, 614–618 (2001).
Sato, J. J. et al. Deciphering and dating the red panda’s ancestry and early adaptive radiation of Musteloidea. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 53, 907–922 (2009).
Meredith, R. W. et al. Impacts of the Cretaceous Terrestrial Revolution and KPg extinction on mammal diversification. Science 334, 521–524 (2011).
Bergsten, J. A review of long-branch attraction. Cladistics 21, 163–193 (2005).
Rosen, D. E. A vicariance model of Caribbean biogeography. Syst. Zool. 24, 431–464 (1975).
Douady, C. J. & Douzery, E. J. P. Molecular estimation of eulipotyphlan divergence times and the evolution of “Insectivora”. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 28, 285–296 (2003).
Whidden, H. P. & Asher, R. J. The origin of the Greater Antillean Insectivorans. In ( Woods, C. A. & Sergile, F. E. Eds) Biogeography of the West Indies: patterns and perspectives. CRC Press, Boca Raton, pp. 237–252 (2001).
Phillips, M. J. Geomolecular dating and the origin of placental mammals. Syst. Biol. 65, 546–567 (2016).
Graham, A. Geohistory models and Cenozoic paleoenvironments of the Caribbean region. Syst. Bot. 28, 378–386 (2003).
Brandt, A. H. et al. Mitogenomic sequences support a north-south subspecies subdivision within Solenodon paradoxus. Mitochondr. DNA doi: 10.3109/24701394.2016.1167891 (2016).
Arbogast, B. S., Edwards, S. V., Wakeley, J., Beerli, P. & Slowinski, J. B. Estimating divergence times from molecular data on phylogenetic and population genetic timescales. Annu. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 33, 707–740 (2002).
Fabre, P.-H. et al. Rodents of the Caribbean: origin and diversification of hutias unraveled by next-generation museomics. Biol. Lett. 10, doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2014.0266 (2014).
Santiago-Valentin, E. & Olmstead, R. G. Historical biogeography of Caribbean plants: introduction to current knowledge and possibilities from a phylogenetic perspective. Taxon 53, 299–319 (2004).
Echelle, A. A., Fuselier, L., Van Den Bussche, R. A., Rodriguez, C. M. L. & Smith, M. L. Molecular systematics of Hispaniolan pupfishes (Cyprinodontidae: Cyprinodon): implications for the biogeography of insular Caribbean fishes. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 39, 855–864 (2006).
Heinicke, M. P., Duellman, W. E. & Hedges, S. B. Major Caribbean and Central American frog faunas originated by ancient oceanic dispersal. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 104, 10092–10097 (2007).
Glor, R. E., Losos, J. B. & Larson, A. Out of Cuba: overwater dispersal and speciation among lizards in the Anolis carolinensis subgroup. Mol. Ecol. 14, 2419–2432 (2005).
Hedges, S. B., Couloux, A. & Vidal, N. Molecular phylogeny, classification, and biogeography of West Indian racer snakes of the tribe Alsophiini (Squamata, Dipsadidae, Xenodontinae). Zootaxa 2067, 1–28 (2009).
Brace, S., Turvey, S. T., Weksler, M., Hoogland, M. L. P. & Barnes, I. Unexpected evolutionary diversity in a recently extinct Caribbean mammal radiation. Proc. R. Soc. B. 282, 20142371, doi: 10.1098/rspb.2014.2371 (2015).
Dávalos, L. M. Short-faced bats (Phyllostomidae: Stenodermatina): a Caribbean radiation of strict frugivores. J. Biogeogr. 34, 365–375 (2007).
Kay, R. F. Biogeography in deep time – What do phylogenetics, geology, and paleoclimate tell us about early platyrrhine evolution? Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 82, 358–374 (2015).
Oneal, E., Otte, D. & Knowles, L. L. Testing for biogeocraphic mechanisms promoting divergence in Caribbean cricket (genus Amphiacusta). J. Biogeogr. 37, 530–540 (2010).
Forsman, A.,, Merilä, J. & Ebenhard, T. Phenotypic evolution of dispersal-enhancing traits in insular voles. Proc. R. Soc. B. 278, 225–232 (2011).
Tamura, K., Stecher, G., Peterson, D., Filipski, A. & Kumar, S. MEGA6: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis Version 6.0. Mol. Biol. Evol. 30, 2725–2729 (2013).
Wiens, J. J. Missing data and the design of phylogenetic analyses. J. Biomed. Inform. 39, 34–42 (2006).
Wolsan, M. & Sato, J. J. Effects of data incompleteness on the relative performance of parsimony and Bayesian approaches in a supermatrix phylogenetic reconstruction of Mustelidae and Procyonidae (Carnivora). Cladistics 26, 168–194 (2010).
Lanfear, R., Calcott, B., Ho, S. Y. W. & Guidon, S. PartitionFinder: Combined Selection of partitioning schemes and substitution models for phylogenetic analyses. Molecular Biology and Evolution 29, 1695–1701 (2012).
Zwickl, D. J. Genetic Algorithm Approaches for the Phylogenetic Analysis of Large Biological Sequence Datasets under the Maximum Likelihood Criterion. PhD Thesis, University of Texas at Austin (2006).
Ronquist, F. & Huelsenbeck, J. P. MrBayes 3: Bayesian phylogenetic inference under mixed models. Bioinformatics 19, 1572–1574 (2003).
Drummond, A. J. & Rambaut, A. BEAST: Bayesian evolutionary analysis by sampling trees. BMC Evol. Biol. 7 (214), 1–8 (2007).
Drummond, A. J., Ho, S. Y. W., Phillips, M. J. & Rambaut, A. Relaxed phylogenetics and dating with confidence. PLoS Biol. 4, 699–710 (2006).
Ho, S. Y. W. Calibrating molecular estimates of substitution rates and divergence times in birds. J. Avian Biol. 38, 409–414 (2007).
Ho, S. Y. W. & Phillips, M. J. Accounting for calibration uncertainty in phylogenetic estimation of evolutionary divergence times. Syst. Biol. 58, 367–380 (2009).
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to Antonio Cádiz Díaz, Emanuel Mora Macías, Lainet García Rivera, Manuel Iturriaga Monsisbay, Kento Tanaka, and Yasunori Yamaguchi for their help throughout this study. We thank Osamu Hoson and Osamu Takahashi for their role in sampling S. cubanus. We also thank Robert C. Dowler for providing tissue samples for genetic analysis. This study was supported financially in part by JSPS via Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (21681028 and 25702047 to M.K.), the Naito Foundation (to M.K.), and Green Science Research Center in Fukuyama University (grants-in-aid for scientific research to J.J.S). Other funding came from private contributions of the authors. Logistic support was provided by the Faculty of Biology, Havana University, Direction of Alejandro de Humboldt National Park at CITMA-Guantanamo, the Sector La Melba of Alejandro de Humboldt National Park, and the Center for Environmental Management and Control, The Environment Agency, Cuba.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
S.D.O. planed the research project. J.J.S. and M.K. financially supported the project. S.D.O., L.M.E.-D., R.B.-P., G.B.-Q., J.L.D.-L., J.G.-D., J.A.-L., S.T.N., N.Y. and M.K. did the sampling of seven Cuban solenodons. J.J.S. did the laboratory works, conducted the molecular phylogenetic analyses, and drafted the manuscript. All authors reviewed the manuscript and joined the discussion.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Sato, J., Ohdachi, S., Echenique-Diaz, L. et al. Molecular phylogenetic analysis of nuclear genes suggests a Cenozoic over-water dispersal origin for the Cuban solenodon. Sci Rep 6, 31173 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep31173
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep31173