Harvestman phylogeny

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Phylogenetic analysis by Garwood et al. (2014) showing the diversification of Opiliones

Harvestmen (Opiliones) are an order of arachnids often confused with spiders, though the two orders are not closely related. Research on harvestman phylogeny (that is, the phylogenetic tree) is in a state of flux. While some families are clearly monophyletic, that is share a common ancestor, others are not, and the relationships between families are often not well understood.

The relationship of harvestmen with other arachnid orders is still not sufficiently resolved.

Scorpiones

Opiliones

Pseudoscorpiones

Solifugae

Dromopoda
(after Giribet et al. 2002)[1]

Opiliones

Scorpiones

Pseudoscorpiones

Solifugae

Dromopoda
(after Shultz 1990)[2]

Up until the 1980s they were thought to be closely related to mites (Acari). In 1990, Shultz proposed grouping them with scorpions, pseudoscorpions and Solifugae ("camel spiders"); he named this clade Dromopoda.[2] This view is currently widely accepted. However, the relationships of the orders within Dromopoda are not yet sufficiently resolved. Analyses of recent taxa suggested the harvestmen to be the sister group of the three others, collectively called Novogenuata.[2] An analysis also considering fossil taxa[1] concluded that the harvestmen are sister to Haplocnemata (Pseudoscorpions and Solifugae), with Scorpions being the sister group of those three combined.[3] Recent analyses have also recovered the Opiliones as sister-group to the extinct Phalangiotarbids,[4][5] although this has low support, or as sister group to a pseudoscorpion and scorpion clade.[6][7]

Relationship of suborders

In 1796, Pierre André Latreille erected the family "Phalangida" [sic] for the then known harvestmen, but included the genus Galeodes (Solifugae). Tord Tamerlan Teodor Thorell (1892) recognized the suborders Palpatores, Laniatores, Cyphophthalmi (called Anepignathi), but also included the Ricinulei as a harvestman suborder. The latter were removed from the Opiliones by Hansen and William Sørensen (1904), rendering the harvestmen monophyletic.

Cyphophthalmi

Eupnoi

Dyspnoi

Laniatores

(after Giribet et al. 2002)[1]

Cyphophthalmi

Eupnoi

Dyspnoi

Laniatores

(after Shultz 1998)[8]

According to more recent theories, Cyphophthalmi, the most basal suborder, are a sister group to all other harvestmen, which are according to this system called Phalangida. The Phalangida consist of three suborders, the Eupnoi, Dyspnoi and Laniatores. While these three are each monophyletic, it is not clear how exactly they are related. In 2002, Giribet et al. came to the conclusion that Dyspnoi and Laniatores are sister groups, and called them Dyspnolaniatores, which are sister to Eupnoi.[1] This is in contrast to the classical hypothesis that Dyspnoi and Eupnoi form a clade called Palpatores.[3] Dyspnolaniatores was also recovered in a 2011 study.[9]

In 2014, new analysis by Garwood et al. examined 158 morphological traits across 272 species. In Garwood's phylogenetic tree, the basal Opiliones split into the Phalangida and stem Cyphophthalmi. The Cyphophthalmi stem then diversified into Cyphophthalmi proper and the newly identified Tetrophthalmi, while the Phalangida split into Laniatores and the "Palpatores". Finally, the Palpatores diversified into Eupnoi and Dyspnoi. The analysis moves divergence of the extant suborders from the Devonian Period to the Carboniferous. Opiliones' own divergence is dated to 414 million years ago, which arachnid are estimated to have originated during the late Cambrian to early Ordivician.[10]

Genetic analysis performed on a modern Phalangium opilio specimen found that a suppressed gene that, if active, would generate a second pair of eyes at the lateral location, providing independent evidence of four eyes being the ancestral condition. Garwood et al. also argue that Carboniferous harvestmen diversification is more consistent with changes observed in other terrestrial arthropods, which have been linked to high oxygen levels during that period.[10]

Relationship within suborders

References

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