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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

The molecular evolution of the alcohol dehydrogenase locus and the phylogeny of Hawaiian Drosophila.

DNA sequences in the alcohol dehydrogenase genes of flies representing the major groups of Hawaiian Drosophila are used to clarify the relationships of these groups, among themselves and with mainland Drosophila. The topology of the tree derived from these sequences agrees with karyotypic and morphological data but disagrees, in part, with the results of an earlier study that used immunological comparisons between variants of a larval hemolymph protein. A time scale, derived from a comparison of closely related Hawaiian Drosophila species, provides divergence-time estimates that are substantially more recent than those obtained from the immunological studies, although they are still within the bounds set by fossil and biogeographical evidence. The two major lineages of Hawaiian Drosophila, the scaptomyzoids and the drosophiloids, are shown to be widely separated from one another. The scaptomyzoids appear to have diverged early in the history of the subgenus Drosophila, greater than 25 Mya. While hundreds of scaptomyzoid species are found in the Hawaiian archipelago, many fewer are found elsewhere around the world, suggesting that they could have originated outside Hawaii. The drosophiloid lineage is strictly endemic to Hawaii and originated little more than 10 Mya, according to the alcohol dehydrogenase molecular clock. Thus, Drosophila apparently inhabited the Hawaiian archipelago (greater than or equal to 5 Myr before the emergence of the oldest existing high island, Kauai, 5 Mya.[1]

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