Utilizing genotyping-by-sequencing to elucidate Neotropical army ant evolution
Utilizing genotyping-by-sequencing to elucidate Neotropical army ant evolution
Wednesday, November 19, 2014: 9:53 AM
A106 (Oregon Convention Center)
As keystone predators of Neotropical forests, hundreds of vertebrate and invertebrate organisms associate with the 12 known species of Eciton, which exert strong top-down effects on community structure in the leaf litter. Despite their clear ecological importance and strong history of research, a comprehensive phylogenetic and biogeographic study is lacking for the important clade. This absence of phylogenetic resolution has been a substantial impediment to determining ecological and evolutionary dynamics, and presents an opportunity to investigate broader mechanisms of diversification in the Neotropics. Using the high-throughput method genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS), we harvested SNPs from across the Eciton genome to infer the clade’s phylogenetic history and their colonization of Neotropical habitats. This work contributes both to a better understanding of the ecological impact of Neotropical army ants as well as the significance of biogeographic processes in macroevolutionary dynamics.