A phylotranscriptomic framework for flesh fly evolution (Diptera, Calyptratae, Sarcophagidae)

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

  • Liping Yan
  • Eliana Buenaventura
  • Pape, Thomas
  • Sujatha Narayanan Kutty
  • Keith M. Bayless
  • Dong Zhang

The Sarcophagidae (flesh flies) comprise a large and widely distributed radiation within the Calyptratae (Diptera). Larval feeding habits are ecologically diverse and include sarcosaprophagy, coprophagy, herbivory, invertebrate and vertebrate predation, and kleptoparasitism. To elucidate the geographic origin and evolution of flesh fly life-history, we inferred a backbone phylogeny based on transcriptomic data from 26 sarcophagid species covering all three subfamilies plus 15 outgroups. The phylogeny was inferred using maximum parsimony and maximum likelihood methods based on a series of supermatrices, one set with overall information content improved by MARE (2290 loci), one set with 100% gene coverage for all included species (587 loci), and the last set including mitochondrial and nuclear genes (589 loci) and additional taxa. In order to obtain a more detailed hypothesis, we utilized the supertree approach to combine results from the present study with previously published hypotheses. This resulted supertree covers 84 of the one hundred currently recognized sarcophagid genera and formed the basis for the ancestral state reconstructions. The monophyletic Sarcophagidae is well-supported as sister to {Mystacinobiidae + Oestridae}, and relationships at the subfamily level are inferred as {Sarcophaginae, (Paramacronychiinae + Miltogramminae)}. The Sarcophagidae and each subfamily originated in the Americas, with Sarcophaginae diversifying mainly in the Neotropics, whereas the major radiation of both Miltogramminae and Paramacronychiinae occurred in the Palaearctic. Sarcosaprophagy is reconstructed as the ancestral larval feeding habit of the family Sarcophagidae and each subfamily. The ancestral sarcophagid larva probably utilized dead invertebrates as food, and the food spectrum expanded together with the diversification of breeding strategies. Particularly, kleptoparasitism in Miltogramminae is derived from sarcosaprophagy and may be seen as having derived from the breeding biology of 'lower' miltogrammines, the larvae of which feed on buried vertebrate carrion.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCladistics
Volume37
Issue number5
Pages (from-to)540-558
Number of pages19
ISSN0748-3007
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

    Research areas

  • FLIES DIPTERA, MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY, PARAMACRONYCHIINAE DIPTERA, SEQUENCE ALIGNMENTS, ANCESTRAL STATE, MODEL SELECTION, 1ST INSTAR, INFERENCE, HISTORY, GENUS

ID: 256322028