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Prolonged morphological expansion of spiny-rayed fishes following the end-Cretaceous.

Ava GhezelayaghRichard C HarringtonEdward D BurressMatthew A CampbellJanet C BucknerProsanta ChakrabartyJessica R GlassW Tyler McCraneyPeter J UnmackChristine E ThackerMichael E AlfaroSarah T FriedmanWilliam B LudtPeter F CowmanMatt FriedmanSamantha A PriceAlex DornburgBrant C FairclothPeter C WainwrightThomas J Near
Published in: Nature ecology & evolution (2022)
Spiny-rayed fishes (Acanthomorpha) dominate modern marine habitats and account for more than a quarter of all living vertebrate species. Previous time-calibrated phylogenies and patterns from the fossil record explain this dominance by correlating the origin of major acanthomorph lineages with the Cretaceous-Palaeogene mass extinction. Here we infer a time-calibrated phylogeny using ultraconserved elements that samples 91.4% of all acanthomorph families and investigate patterns of body shape disparity. Our results show that acanthomorph lineages steadily accumulated throughout the Cenozoic and underwent a significant expansion of among-clade morphological disparity several million years after the end-Cretaceous. These acanthomorph lineages radiated into and diversified within distinct regions of morphospace that characterize iconic lineages, including fast-swimming open-ocean predators, laterally compressed reef fishes, bottom-dwelling flatfishes, seahorses and pufferfishes. The evolutionary success of spiny-rayed fishes is the culmination of multiple species-rich and phenotypically disparate lineages independently diversifying across the globe under a wide range of ecological conditions.
Keyphrases
  • minimally invasive
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • risk assessment