作者
Frédéric Delsuc, Gillian C Gibb, Melanie Kuch, Guillaume Billet, Lionel Hautier, John Southon, Jean-Marie Rouillard, Juan Carlos Fernicola, Sergio F Vizcaíno, Ross DE MacPhee, Hendrik N Poinar
发表日期
2016/2/22
期刊
Current Biology
卷号
26
期号
4
页码范围
R155-R156
出版商
Elsevier
简介
Among the fossils of hitherto unknown mammals that Darwin collected in South America between 1832 and 1833 during the Beagle expedition [1] were examples of the large, heavily armored herbivores later known as glyptodonts. Ever since, glyptodonts have fascinated evolutionary biologists because of their remarkable skeletal adaptations and seemingly isolated phylogenetic position even within their natural group, the cingulate xenarthrans (armadillos and their allies [2]). In possessing a carapace comprised of fused osteoderms, the glyptodonts were clearly related to other cingulates, but their precise phylogenetic position as suggested by morphology remains unresolved [3,4]. To provide a molecular perspective on this issue, we designed sequence-capture baits using in silico reconstructed ancestral sequences and successfully assembled the complete mitochondrial genome of Doedicurus sp., one of the …
引用总数
2016201720182019202020212022202320243111816132011177
学术搜索中的文章
F Delsuc, GC Gibb, M Kuch, G Billet, L Hautier… - Current Biology, 2016