The evolution of marine dwelling in Diptera

Abstract Marine dwelling in Diptera has been relatively unexplored and the frequency of transitions to the marine environment and the evolutionary history remain poorly understood. By reviewing records from the World Register of Marine Species and using ancestral state reconstruction methods, we bui...

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Main Authors: Nina Pak, Stephanie Wu, Joel F. Gibson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-08-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7935
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spelling doaj-3e6d59d0b1d54a0aa163608faf1767a32021-08-16T16:17:17ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-08-011116114401144810.1002/ece3.7935The evolution of marine dwelling in DipteraNina Pak0Stephanie Wu1Joel F. Gibson2Department of Environmental Science, Policy, & Management University of California Berkeley California USADepartment of Environmental Science, Policy, & Management University of California Berkeley California USAEntomology Collection Royal BC Museum Victoria BC CanadaAbstract Marine dwelling in Diptera has been relatively unexplored and the frequency of transitions to the marine environment and the evolutionary history remain poorly understood. By reviewing records from the World Register of Marine Species and using ancestral state reconstruction methods, we build on the fly tree of life phylogeny and ecological descriptions of marine life history. Our ancestral state reconstruction analyses suggest marine dwelling is lacking as an ancestral trait for the most recent common ancestor to Diptera. While many transitions in Empidoidea, Sciomyzoidea, Tipulomorpha, and Culicomorpha seem to have been gradual, other transitions in Tephritoidea and Tabanomorpha were found likely to have been stochastic occurrences. From the collection of 532 marine species, we reveal several independent transitions to the marine environment throughout the fly tree of life. Considering the results from our analysis, we outline potential adaptations for marine flies and discuss the barriers of colonizing the marine environment and the implications to the mechanisms for salt tolerance.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7935ancestral state reconstructioncoastal FliesmacroevolutionPASTMLWoRMS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nina Pak
Stephanie Wu
Joel F. Gibson
spellingShingle Nina Pak
Stephanie Wu
Joel F. Gibson
The evolution of marine dwelling in Diptera
Ecology and Evolution
ancestral state reconstruction
coastal Flies
macroevolution
PASTML
WoRMS
author_facet Nina Pak
Stephanie Wu
Joel F. Gibson
author_sort Nina Pak
title The evolution of marine dwelling in Diptera
title_short The evolution of marine dwelling in Diptera
title_full The evolution of marine dwelling in Diptera
title_fullStr The evolution of marine dwelling in Diptera
title_full_unstemmed The evolution of marine dwelling in Diptera
title_sort evolution of marine dwelling in diptera
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Marine dwelling in Diptera has been relatively unexplored and the frequency of transitions to the marine environment and the evolutionary history remain poorly understood. By reviewing records from the World Register of Marine Species and using ancestral state reconstruction methods, we build on the fly tree of life phylogeny and ecological descriptions of marine life history. Our ancestral state reconstruction analyses suggest marine dwelling is lacking as an ancestral trait for the most recent common ancestor to Diptera. While many transitions in Empidoidea, Sciomyzoidea, Tipulomorpha, and Culicomorpha seem to have been gradual, other transitions in Tephritoidea and Tabanomorpha were found likely to have been stochastic occurrences. From the collection of 532 marine species, we reveal several independent transitions to the marine environment throughout the fly tree of life. Considering the results from our analysis, we outline potential adaptations for marine flies and discuss the barriers of colonizing the marine environment and the implications to the mechanisms for salt tolerance.
topic ancestral state reconstruction
coastal Flies
macroevolution
PASTML
WoRMS
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7935
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