Target capture and massively parallel sequencing of ultraconserved elements (UCEs) for comparative studies at shallow evolutionary time scales
Brian Tilston Smith, Michael G. Harvey, Brant C. Faircloth, Travis C., Glenn, Robb T. Brumfield

TL;DR
This study evaluates ultraconserved DNA elements (UCEs) as effective genomic markers for comparative genetic studies at shallow evolutionary timescales, demonstrating their utility across diverse bird species with rapid, cost-effective sequencing.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates the efficacy of UCEs for shallow-time-scale phylogenetics, showing they are polymorphic, easily obtainable, and comparable to mtDNA results in non-model organisms.
Findings
Recovered 776-1,516 UCE loci across five bird species
53-77% of loci were polymorphic with 2.0-3.2 variable sites
Species trees from UCEs aligned with mtDNA-based estimates
Abstract
Comparative genetic studies of non-model organisms are transforming rapidly due to major advances in sequencing technology. A limiting factor in these studies has been the identification and screening of orthologous loci across an evolutionarily distant set of taxa. Here, we evaluate the efficacy of genomic markers targeting ultraconserved DNA elements (UCEs) for analyses at shallow evolutionary timescales. Using sequence capture and massively parallel sequencing to generate UCE data for five co-distributed Neotropical rainforest bird species, we recovered 776-1,516 UCE loci across the five species. Across species, 53-77 percent of the loci were polymorphic, containing between 2.0 and 3.2 variable sites per polymorphic locus, on average. We performed species tree construction, coalescent modeling, and species delimitation, and we found that the five co-distributed species exhibited…
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