Phylogenetic
inference and divergence dating of snakes using molecules, morphology
and fossils: new insights into convergent evolution of feeding
morphology and limb reduction
Bayesian divergence time analyses were used
to simultaneously infer the phylogenetic relationships and date the
major clades of snakes including several important fossils that have not
previously been included in divergence dating analyses as terminal
taxa. We also explored the effect of using fossilized birth–death (FBD)
and uniform tree priors for divergence dating with terminal
calibrations. Nonclock and relaxed clock analyses of the combined
morphology and molecular data set supported previous molecular
phylogenetic hypotheses for the major clades of snakes, including the
paraphyly of the traditionally recognized Scolecophidia and
Macrostomata. Tip-dating analyses using either a uniform tree prior or
FBD prior that assume that all fossils are tips and that extant lineages
are randomly sampled resulted in older ages than those inferred using a
FBD prior assuming diversified sampling of extant lineages and those
estimated by previous studies. We used Bayesian ancestral state
reconstruction methods to map the evolution of the ability to consume
large prey and the loss of limbs onto our inferred time-calibrated
phylogeny. We found strong support for early evolution of the ability to
consume large prey, indicating multiple independent losses of this
ability. We also found strong support for retention of external
hindlimbs until relatively late in snake evolution, indicating multiple
independent losses of hindlimbs.
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