J 2016

Molecular phylogeny of the megadiverse insect infraorder Bibionomorpha sensu lato (Diptera)

ŠEVČÍK, Jan, David KASPŘÁK, Michal MANTIČ, Scott FITZGERALD, Tereza ŠEVČÍKOVÁ et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Molecular phylogeny of the megadiverse insect infraorder Bibionomorpha sensu lato (Diptera)

Authors

ŠEVČÍK, Jan (203 Czech Republic, guarantor), David KASPŘÁK (203 Czech Republic), Michal MANTIČ (203 Czech Republic), Scott FITZGERALD (840 United States of America), Tereza ŠEVČÍKOVÁ (203 Czech Republic), Andrea TÓTHOVÁ (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution) and Mathias JASCHHOF (752 Sweden)

Edition

PeerJ, 2016, 2167-8359

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

10600 1.6 Biological sciences

Country of publisher

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Impact factor

Impact factor: 2.177

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14310/16:00093890

Organization unit

Faculty of Science

UT WoS

000385583100002

Keywords in English

Lower Diptera; Sciaroidea; Phylogenetic analysis; Molecular markers; Systematics

Tags

Změněno: 7/3/2018 13:31, Mgr. Lucie Jarošová, DiS.

Abstract

V originále

The phylogeny of the insect infraorder Bibionomorpha (Diptera) is reconstructed based on the combined analysis of three nuclear (18S, 28S, CAD) and three mitochondrial (12S, 16S, COI) gene markers. All the analyses strongly support the monophyly of Bibionomorpha in both the narrow (sensu stricto) and the broader (sensu lato) concepts. The major lineages of Bibionomorpha sensu lato (Sciaroidea, Bibionoidea, Anisopodoidea, and Scatopsoidea) and most of the included families are supported as monophyletic groups. was Axymyiidae not found to be part of Bibionomorpha nor was it found to be its sister group. Bibionidae was paraphyletic with respect to Hesperinidae and Keroplatidae was paraphyletic with respect to Lygistorrhinidae. The included Sciaroidea incertae sedis (except Ohakunea Edwards) were found to belong to one clade, but the relationships within this group and its position within Sciaroidea require further study.