Phylogeny of the Ants: Diversification in the Age of Angiosperms
Florida State University · Harvard University
Abstract
We present a large-scale molecular phylogeny of the ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), based on 4.5 kilobases of sequence data from six gene regions extracted from 139 of the 288 described extant genera, representing 19 of the 20 subfamilies. All but two subfamilies are recovered as monophyletic. Divergence time estimates calibrated by minimum age constraints from 43 fossils indicate that most of the subfamilies representing extant ants arose much earlier than previously proposed but only began to diversify during the Late Cretaceous to Early Eocene. This period also witnessed the rise of angiosperms and most herbivorous insects.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 56.51
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
5- CSCorrie S. MoreauCorresponding
Florida State University, Harvard University
- CDCharles D. Bell
Florida State University, Harvard University
- RVRoger Vila
Florida State University, Harvard University
- SBS. Bruce Archibald
Florida State University, Harvard University
- NENaomi E. Pierce
Florida State University, Harvard University
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Extant taxon
- Hymenoptera
- Monophyly
- Phylogenetics
- Evolutionary biology
- Phylum
- Divergence (linguistics)