Data from: Identification of the notothenioid sister lineage illuminates the biogeographic history of an Antarctic adaptive radiation
Thomas J. Near, Alex Dornburg, Richard C. Harrington, Claudio Oliveira, Theodore W. Pietsch, Christine E. Thacker, Takashi P. Satoh, Eri Katayama, Peter C. Wainwright, Joseph T. Eastman & Jeremy M. Beaulieu
Background: Antarctic notothenioids are an impressive adaptive radiation. While they share recent common ancestry with several species-depauperate lineages that exhibit a relictual distribution in areas peripheral to the Southern Ocean, an understanding of their evolutionary origins and biogeographic history is limited as the sister lineage of notothenioids remains unidentified. The phylogenetic placement of notothenioids among major lineages of perciform fishes, which include sculpins, rockfishes, sticklebacks, eelpouts, scorpionfishes, perches, groupers and soapfishes, remains unresolved. We investigate...
Affiliations
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Sao Paulo State University1
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Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County1
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Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture1
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Ohio University1
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Yale University1
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National Museum of Nature and Science1
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National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis1
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University of Oxford1
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University of California, Davis1