Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2834074 Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 2013 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Morris Goodman was a revolutionary. Together with a mere handful of like-minded scientists, Morris established himself as a leader in the molecular phylogenetic revolution of the 1960s. The effects of this revolution are most evident in this journal, which he founded in 1992. Happily for lemur biologists, one of Morris Goodman’s primary interests was in reconstructing the phylogeny of the primates, including the tooth-combed Lorisifomes of Africa and Asia, and the Lemuriformes of Madagascar (collectively referred to as the suborder Strepsirrhini). This paper traces the development of molecular phylogenetic and evolutionary genetic trends and methods over the 50-year expanse of Morris Goodman’s career, particularly as they apply to our understanding of lemuriform phylogeny, biogeography, and biology. Notably, this perspective reveals that the lemuriform genome is sufficiently rich in phylogenetic signal such that the very earliest molecular phylogenetic studies – many of which were conducted by Goodman himself – have been validated by contemporary studies that have exploited advanced computational methods applied to phylogenomic scale data; studies that were beyond imagining in the earliest days of phylogeny reconstruction. Nonetheless, the frontier still beckons. New technologies for gathering and analyzing genomic data will allow investigators to build upon what can now be considered a nearly-known phylogeny of the Lemuriformes in order to ask innovative questions about the evolutionary mechanisms that generate and maintain the extraordinary breadth and depth of biological diversity within this remarkable clade of primates.

Graphical abstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slideHighlights► Dr. Morris Goodman’s contribution to primate molecular phylogenetics is discussed. ► The state of the field of lemur molecular phylogenetics is reviewed. ► The development of the molecular phylogenetic field and MPE is reviewed. ► The phylogeny, biogeography, divergence age, and molecular evolution of lemurs is reviewed. ► Biological questions that will be enhanced by genomic-level data in lemurs are suggested.

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