Friday, February 8, 2013

Largest-ever study of mammalian ancestry completed by renowned research team

Largest-ever study of mammalian ancestry completed by renowned research team [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 7-Feb-2013
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Contact: Leigh Kish
KishL@carnegiemnh.org
412-622-3361
Carnegie Museum of Natural History

Carnegie scientists are part of international collaboration, Assembling the Tree of Life

Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaA groundbreaking six-year research collaboration has produced the most complete picture yet of the evolution of placental mammals, the group that includes humans. Placental mammals are the largest branch of the mammalian family tree, with more than 5,100 living species. Researchers from Carnegie Museum of Natural History are among the team of 23 that took part in this extensive interdisciplinary effort that utilizes molecular (DNA) and morphological (anatomy) data on an extraordinary scale. By combining these two types of data scientists reconstructed, to an unprecedented level of detail, the family tree of placental mammals. This study explored thousands of characteristics of the anatomy of both living and extinct placental mammals.

This new project produced a more complete picture of mammalian history and provides a huge dataset that will become the starting point of research for a number of scientific questions, including those of vital importance today: how mammals may have survived climate change in the past and what may that mean for our future. The paper appears today in the journal Science.

The collaboration is part of the Assembling the Tree of Life (ATOL) project funded by the National Science Foundation.

Joining forces, joining research

Today's article reveals the final results of the six-year ATOL project. The study began with two teams organizing data from two distinct approaches to evolutionary research: molecular data (DNA), and morphological data (anatomical features).

"In the field of mammal research, there had been a big divide between people working with DNA and others working on morphology," explains John Wible, PhD, Curator of Mammals at Carnegie Museum of Natural History and co-author on the paper. "They just weren't working with each other until now."

The molecular team collected DNA sequences of living animals and the morphology team examined the anatomy of both living and extinct mammals. The molecular team only sampled living mammals, because genetic material can't be extracted from fossils older than 30,000 years,. Thus, to include fossils, morphological information was essential. Researchers in morphology deal with individual physical features, from bone length to types of teeth to the presence of stripes in the fur; each one of these features is termed a 'character.' By collecting as many characters as possible and comparing their variation among dozens of specimens, relationships between species can be tested and broader patterns emerge.

The ATOL project became a morphological powerhouse. Generally, a group of 500 characters is considered to be a large dataset. The morphology researchers on the ATOL project generated an unprecedented 4,500 characters. Once both DNA and morphological datasets were produced, the resulting combined matrix provided an unprecedented amount of information for each of the 83 mammals included in the study.

"It's not that we hadn't combined morphology with DNA before." clarifies co-author Michelle Spaulding, PhD, the Rea Post-doctoral Fellow at Carnegie Museum of Natural History. "This time, we ratcheted up the amount of morphological detail phenomenally, providing a larger anatomical base for the study as compared with DNA than is typical.."

With the new Tree of Life matrix, researchers now have greater context for the fragmentary fossils they have in handoften scant evidence such as a few teeth or a skull fragmentpotentially shedding light on little-known species that have yet to find a solid home in the evolutionary tree.

Ancestral origins estimated

Thanks to the incredible amount of anatomical information collected, the researchers were able to predict the appearance of the most recent common ancestor of all placental mammals. Explains Spaulding, "We have all these placentals alive today, from elephants to shrews, from things that fly to things that swim. What could the common ancestor of these things that are so different possibly look like?"

"That's the power of 4,500 characters," says Wible. "We looked at all aspects of mammalian anatomy, from the skull and skeleton, to the teeth, to internal organs, to muscles, and even fur patterns. Using the new family tree of mammals in tandem with this anatomical data, we were able to reconstruct what this common placental ancestor may have looked like."

The scientists were able to work with an artist to approximate the appearance of this ancestor. While only hypothetical, the illustrated concept for this ancestorfrom body size to fur type to number of teethcould not have been achieved prior to the Herculean task of developing the matrix.

Earliest date for placentals

"We focused our study on the time around the CretaceousTertiary (KT) boundary, 65 million years ago," states Spaulding, "Molecular and morphological based studies differ on the age when placentals first appeared. Molecular studies place the origin in the mid-Cretaceous, when dinosaurs still dominated. On the other hand, morphological studies have routinely found no evidence of any placental fossils in this time period, and instead place the placental origin after the mass extinction at the close of the Cretaceous that ended dinosaur dominance."

One major goal of this project was to address this controversy and results found that placental mammals appeared after the KT boundary, implying that the mass extinction was a critical event in mammalian evolutionary history.

New website an essential tool

The study was conducted utilizing the web application Morphobank (www.morphobank.org). The matrix is freely available online and provides a road map to the Tree of Life team's findings by precisely outlining how the team defined each of the more than 4,500 characters in the dataset. Proving that a picture is worth a thousand words, the majority of characters include illustrations.

As revolutionary as the study, the website also marks a new era in how collaborative research may proceed. "We couldn't have accomplished this without Morphobank," lauds Spaulding. "This website allowed members of the team, spread all over the globe, to work simultaneously."

###

The ATOL project

The Assembling the Tree of Life (ATOL) project, funded by the National Science Foundation, is an effort to promote interdisciplinary partnerships in global biological research. The ATOL program encourages researchers of different topicssuch as fossils, biodiversity, genetics, and evolutionto combine their independent lines of study into a single large framework, or matrix. This matrix contextualizes their individual research findings and is a tool for confirming existing evolutionary relationships and possibly discovering new ones in light of previously unrecognized connections.

Authors

Maureen A. O'Leary (Stony Brook University)

Jonathan I. Bloch (Florida Museum of Natural History)

John J. Flynn (American Museum of Natural History)

Timothy J. Gaudin (University of Tennessee at Chattanooga)

Andres Giallombardo (American Museum of Natural History)

Norberto P. Giannini (American Museum of Natural History; Universidad Nacional de Tucumn, current)

Suzann L. Goldberg (American Museum of Natural History)

Brian P. Kraatz (American Museum of Natural History; Western University of Health Sciences)

Zhe-Xi Luo (Carnegie Museum of Natural History; University of Chicago, current)

Jin Meng (American Museum of Natural History)

Xijun Ni (American Museum of Natural History; Chinese Academy of Sciences, current)

Michael J. Novacek (American Museum of Natural History)

Fernando A. Perini (American Museum of Natural History)

Zachary Randall (Florida Museum of Natural History)

Guillermo W. Rougier (University of Louisville)

Eric J. Sargis (Yale University)

Mary T. Silcox (University of Toronto Scarborough)

Nancy B. Simmons (American Museum of Natural History)

Michelle Spaulding (American Museum of Natural History; Carnegie Museum of Natural History, current)

Pal M. Velazco (American Museum of Natural History)

Marcelo Weksler (American Museum of Natural History; Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, current)

John R. Wible (Carnegie Museum of Natural History)

Andrea L. Cirranello (Stony Brook University; American Museum of Natural History)

Carnegie Museum of Natural History, one of the four Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh, is among the top natural history museums in the country and is redefining what it means to be a 21st-century natural history museum. It maintains, preserves, and interprets an extraordinary collection of 22 million objects and scientific specimens used to broaden understanding of evolution, conservation, and biodiversity. Through four new Centers, Carnegie Museum of Natural History generates new scientific knowledge, advances science literacy, and inspires visitors of all ages to become passionate about science, nature, and world cultures. More information is available by calling 412.622.3131 or by visiting the website, www.carnegiemnh.org.


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Largest-ever study of mammalian ancestry completed by renowned research team [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 7-Feb-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Leigh Kish
KishL@carnegiemnh.org
412-622-3361
Carnegie Museum of Natural History

Carnegie scientists are part of international collaboration, Assembling the Tree of Life

Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaA groundbreaking six-year research collaboration has produced the most complete picture yet of the evolution of placental mammals, the group that includes humans. Placental mammals are the largest branch of the mammalian family tree, with more than 5,100 living species. Researchers from Carnegie Museum of Natural History are among the team of 23 that took part in this extensive interdisciplinary effort that utilizes molecular (DNA) and morphological (anatomy) data on an extraordinary scale. By combining these two types of data scientists reconstructed, to an unprecedented level of detail, the family tree of placental mammals. This study explored thousands of characteristics of the anatomy of both living and extinct placental mammals.

This new project produced a more complete picture of mammalian history and provides a huge dataset that will become the starting point of research for a number of scientific questions, including those of vital importance today: how mammals may have survived climate change in the past and what may that mean for our future. The paper appears today in the journal Science.

The collaboration is part of the Assembling the Tree of Life (ATOL) project funded by the National Science Foundation.

Joining forces, joining research

Today's article reveals the final results of the six-year ATOL project. The study began with two teams organizing data from two distinct approaches to evolutionary research: molecular data (DNA), and morphological data (anatomical features).

"In the field of mammal research, there had been a big divide between people working with DNA and others working on morphology," explains John Wible, PhD, Curator of Mammals at Carnegie Museum of Natural History and co-author on the paper. "They just weren't working with each other until now."

The molecular team collected DNA sequences of living animals and the morphology team examined the anatomy of both living and extinct mammals. The molecular team only sampled living mammals, because genetic material can't be extracted from fossils older than 30,000 years,. Thus, to include fossils, morphological information was essential. Researchers in morphology deal with individual physical features, from bone length to types of teeth to the presence of stripes in the fur; each one of these features is termed a 'character.' By collecting as many characters as possible and comparing their variation among dozens of specimens, relationships between species can be tested and broader patterns emerge.

The ATOL project became a morphological powerhouse. Generally, a group of 500 characters is considered to be a large dataset. The morphology researchers on the ATOL project generated an unprecedented 4,500 characters. Once both DNA and morphological datasets were produced, the resulting combined matrix provided an unprecedented amount of information for each of the 83 mammals included in the study.

"It's not that we hadn't combined morphology with DNA before." clarifies co-author Michelle Spaulding, PhD, the Rea Post-doctoral Fellow at Carnegie Museum of Natural History. "This time, we ratcheted up the amount of morphological detail phenomenally, providing a larger anatomical base for the study as compared with DNA than is typical.."

With the new Tree of Life matrix, researchers now have greater context for the fragmentary fossils they have in handoften scant evidence such as a few teeth or a skull fragmentpotentially shedding light on little-known species that have yet to find a solid home in the evolutionary tree.

Ancestral origins estimated

Thanks to the incredible amount of anatomical information collected, the researchers were able to predict the appearance of the most recent common ancestor of all placental mammals. Explains Spaulding, "We have all these placentals alive today, from elephants to shrews, from things that fly to things that swim. What could the common ancestor of these things that are so different possibly look like?"

"That's the power of 4,500 characters," says Wible. "We looked at all aspects of mammalian anatomy, from the skull and skeleton, to the teeth, to internal organs, to muscles, and even fur patterns. Using the new family tree of mammals in tandem with this anatomical data, we were able to reconstruct what this common placental ancestor may have looked like."

The scientists were able to work with an artist to approximate the appearance of this ancestor. While only hypothetical, the illustrated concept for this ancestorfrom body size to fur type to number of teethcould not have been achieved prior to the Herculean task of developing the matrix.

Earliest date for placentals

"We focused our study on the time around the CretaceousTertiary (KT) boundary, 65 million years ago," states Spaulding, "Molecular and morphological based studies differ on the age when placentals first appeared. Molecular studies place the origin in the mid-Cretaceous, when dinosaurs still dominated. On the other hand, morphological studies have routinely found no evidence of any placental fossils in this time period, and instead place the placental origin after the mass extinction at the close of the Cretaceous that ended dinosaur dominance."

One major goal of this project was to address this controversy and results found that placental mammals appeared after the KT boundary, implying that the mass extinction was a critical event in mammalian evolutionary history.

New website an essential tool

The study was conducted utilizing the web application Morphobank (www.morphobank.org). The matrix is freely available online and provides a road map to the Tree of Life team's findings by precisely outlining how the team defined each of the more than 4,500 characters in the dataset. Proving that a picture is worth a thousand words, the majority of characters include illustrations.

As revolutionary as the study, the website also marks a new era in how collaborative research may proceed. "We couldn't have accomplished this without Morphobank," lauds Spaulding. "This website allowed members of the team, spread all over the globe, to work simultaneously."

###

The ATOL project

The Assembling the Tree of Life (ATOL) project, funded by the National Science Foundation, is an effort to promote interdisciplinary partnerships in global biological research. The ATOL program encourages researchers of different topicssuch as fossils, biodiversity, genetics, and evolutionto combine their independent lines of study into a single large framework, or matrix. This matrix contextualizes their individual research findings and is a tool for confirming existing evolutionary relationships and possibly discovering new ones in light of previously unrecognized connections.

Authors

Maureen A. O'Leary (Stony Brook University)

Jonathan I. Bloch (Florida Museum of Natural History)

John J. Flynn (American Museum of Natural History)

Timothy J. Gaudin (University of Tennessee at Chattanooga)

Andres Giallombardo (American Museum of Natural History)

Norberto P. Giannini (American Museum of Natural History; Universidad Nacional de Tucumn, current)

Suzann L. Goldberg (American Museum of Natural History)

Brian P. Kraatz (American Museum of Natural History; Western University of Health Sciences)

Zhe-Xi Luo (Carnegie Museum of Natural History; University of Chicago, current)

Jin Meng (American Museum of Natural History)

Xijun Ni (American Museum of Natural History; Chinese Academy of Sciences, current)

Michael J. Novacek (American Museum of Natural History)

Fernando A. Perini (American Museum of Natural History)

Zachary Randall (Florida Museum of Natural History)

Guillermo W. Rougier (University of Louisville)

Eric J. Sargis (Yale University)

Mary T. Silcox (University of Toronto Scarborough)

Nancy B. Simmons (American Museum of Natural History)

Michelle Spaulding (American Museum of Natural History; Carnegie Museum of Natural History, current)

Pal M. Velazco (American Museum of Natural History)

Marcelo Weksler (American Museum of Natural History; Museu Nacional, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, current)

John R. Wible (Carnegie Museum of Natural History)

Andrea L. Cirranello (Stony Brook University; American Museum of Natural History)

Carnegie Museum of Natural History, one of the four Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh, is among the top natural history museums in the country and is redefining what it means to be a 21st-century natural history museum. It maintains, preserves, and interprets an extraordinary collection of 22 million objects and scientific specimens used to broaden understanding of evolution, conservation, and biodiversity. Through four new Centers, Carnegie Museum of Natural History generates new scientific knowledge, advances science literacy, and inspires visitors of all ages to become passionate about science, nature, and world cultures. More information is available by calling 412.622.3131 or by visiting the website, www.carnegiemnh.org.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-02/cmon-lso020413.php

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