iScience (Nov 2021)

Evolutionary history and divergence times of Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) revealed through transcriptomics

  • Manpreet Kohli,
  • Harald Letsch,
  • Carola Greve,
  • Olivier Béthoux,
  • Isabelle Deregnaucourt,
  • Shanlin Liu,
  • Xin Zhou,
  • Alexander Donath,
  • Christoph Mayer,
  • Lars Podsiadlowski,
  • Simon Gunkel,
  • Ryuichiro Machida,
  • Oliver Niehuis,
  • Jes Rust,
  • Torsten Wappler,
  • Xin Yu,
  • Bernhard Misof,
  • Jessica Ware

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 11
p. 103324

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Dragonflies and damselflies are among the earliest flying insects with extant representatives. However, unraveling details of their long evolutionary history, such as egg laying (oviposition) strategies, is impeded by unresolved phylogenetic relationships, particularly in damselflies. Here we present a transcriptome-based phylogenetic reconstruction of Odonata, analyzing 2,980 protein-coding genes in 105 species representing nearly all the order’s families. All damselfly and most dragonfly families are recovered as monophyletic. Our data suggest a sister relationship between dragonfly families of Gomphidae and Petaluridae. According to our divergence time estimates, both crown-Zygoptera and -Anisoptera arose during the late Triassic. Egg-laying with a reduced ovipositor apparently evolved in dragonflies during the late Jurassic/early Cretaceous. Lastly, we also test the impact of fossil choice and placement, particularly, of the extinct fossil species, †Triassolestodes asiaticus, and †Proterogomphus renateae on divergence time estimates. We find placement of †Proterogomphus renateae to be much more impactful than †Triassolestodes asiaticus.

Keywords