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Published December 2, 2023 | Accepted
Journal Article Open

Bayesian total-evidence dating revisits sloth phylogeny and biogeography: a cautionary tale on morphological clock analyses

Abstract

Combining morphological and molecular characters through Bayesian total-evidence dating allows inferring the phylogenetic and timescale framework of both extant and fossil taxa, while accounting for the stochasticity and incompleteness of the fossil record. Such an integrative approach is particularly needed when dealing with clades such as sloths (Mammalia: Folivora), for which developmental and biomechanical studies have shown high levels of morphological convergence whereas molecular data can only account for a limited percentage of their total species richness. Here, we propose an alternative hypothesis of sloth evolution that emphasizes the pervasiveness of morphological convergence and the importance of considering the fossil record and an adequate taxon sampling in both phylogenetic and biogeographic inferences. Regardless of different clock models and morphological datasets, the extant sloth Bradypus is consistently recovered as a megatherioid, and Choloepus as a mylodontoid, in agreement with molecular-only analyses. The recently extinct Caribbean sloths (Megalocnoidea) are found to be a monophyletic sister-clade of Megatherioidea, in contrast to previous phylogenetic hypotheses. Our results contradict previous morphological analyses and further support the polyphyly of "Megalonychidae", whose members were found in five different clades. Regardless of taxon sampling and clock models, the Caribbean colonization of sloths is compatible with the exhumation of islands along Aves Ridge and its geological time frame. Overall, our total-evidence analysis illustrates the difficulty of positioning highly incomplete fossils, although a robust phylogenetic framework was recovered by an a posteriori removal of taxa with high percentages of missing characters. Elimination of these taxa improved topological resolution by reducing polytomies and increasing node support. However, it introduced a systematic and geographic bias because most of these incomplete specimens are from northern South America. This is evident in biogeographic reconstructions, which suggest Patagonia as the area of origin of many clades when taxa are underrepresented, but Amazonia and/or Central and Southern Andes when all taxa are included. More generally, our analyses demonstrate the instability of topology and divergence time estimates when using different morphological datasets and clock models, and thus caution against making macroevolutionary inferences when node support is weak or when uncertainties in the fossil record are not considered.

Copyright and License

© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Systematic Biologists. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Acknowledgement

We are deeply indebted to Laurent Marivaux and Pierre-Henri Fabre (ISE-M, Montpellier, France), Jorge Vélez-Juarbe (LACM, Los Angeles, USA), Lázaro Viñola-López (UF, Gainesville, USA), François Pujos (CONICET-IANIGLA, Mendoza, Argentina), Myriam Boivin (CONICET, San Salvador de Jujuy, Argentina), and Renaud Joannes-Boyau (Southern Cross University, Lismore, Australia), for their participation in field campaigns in the Lesser and Greater Antilles, to our field teams in Western Amazonia, and to the GAARAnti and GARAnti teams. We are thankful to April Wright and Isabel Sanmartín for their comments and handling of this manuscript, as well as to Robin Beck, Ross MacPhee, and David Černý for their constructive and thorough revisions that significantly improved the quality of this paper. This is ISEM publication 202Y-0XX-Sud.

Funding

This work was supported by the French ―Agence Nationale de la Recherche‖ (ANR) in the framework of the GAARAnti program (ANR-17-CE31-0009) and the LabEx CEBA (ANR-10-LABX-25-01) and by the cooperative programs ECOS-FonCyT (A14-U01) and CoopIntEER CNRS-CONICET (n°252540), in the frame of the ongoing cooperation agreement between the Museo de Historia Natural de la Universidad Nacional Mayor San Marcos (Lima, Peru) and the Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution at the Université de Montpellier. Fieldwork and post-field analyses in Peru were carried out thanks to the support from the National Geographic Society (grant n° 9679-15) and the Campus France program of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs and The Leakey Foundation.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interests.

Data Availability

Link to SI in DRYAD: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.m0cfxpp82

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Additional details

Created:
December 21, 2023
Modified:
December 21, 2023