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Chemical cues in subterranean habitats differ highly from those on the surface due to the contrasting environmental conditions, such as absolute darkness, high humidity or food scarcity. Subterranean animals underwent changes to their sensory systems to facilitate the perception of essential stimuli for underground lifestyles. Despite representing unique systems to understand biological adaptation, the genomic basis of chemosensation across cave-dwelling species remains unexplored from a macroevolutionary perspective. Here, we explore the evolution of chemoreception in three beetle tribes that underwent at least six independent transitions to the underground, through a phylogenomics spyglass. Our findings suggest that the chemosensory gene repertoire varies dramatically between species. Overall, no parallel changes in the net rate of evolution of chemosensory gene families were detected prior, during, or after the habitat shift among subterranean lineages. Contrarily, we found evidence of lineage-specific changes within surface and subterranean lineages. However, our results reveal key duplications and losses shared between some of the lineages transitioning to the underground, including the loss of sugar receptors and gene duplications of the highly conserved ionotropic receptors IR25a and IR8a, involved in thermal and humidity sensing among other olfactory roles in insects. These duplications were detected both in independent subterranean lineages and their surface relatives, suggesting parallel evolution of these genes across lineages giving rise to cave-dwelling species. Overall, our results shed light on the genomic basis of chemoreception in subterranean beetles and contribute to our understanding of the genomic underpinnings of adaptation to the subterranean lifestyle at a macroevolutionary scale.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108027 | DOI Listing |
Science
September 2025
Department of Neuroscience, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.
The unguis (hoof, claw, or nail) of the first digit (D1, also known as the thumb or pollex) of the tetrapod hand exhibits numerous functional adaptations, but its macroevolutionary association with ecological diversity is unknown. Across Rodentia, we find that most extant genera and ancestral lineages bear D1 nails. Exceptions follow structure-function associations that arose independently multiple times, specifically, the gain of D1 claws with subterranean habits and the loss of D1 ungues with oral-only feeding behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Evol
July 2025
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Genomes provide tools for reconstructing organismal evolution and larger Earth system processes. Although genome sequences have been jointly analyzed with geological data to understand links between biological evolution and geological phenomena such as erosion and uplift, genomic and natural history observations have seldom been leveraged to reconstruct the timescale of landscape change in cases where traditional methods from the Earth sciences cannot. Here, we reconstruct the genomic evolution of cave-adapted amblyopsid fishes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
August 2025
College of Life Sciences, Anhui Normal University, Wuhu, 241000, China.
Climatic upheavals throughout Earth's history have driven species to subterranean refugia, where stable microclimates buffer environmental extremes. The spider family Pimoidae, relict lineages sensitive to thermal fluctuations, exemplifies this climate-driven habitat transition. Here, we present the first chromosome-level genome of Pimoa clavata, a troglophilic spider endemic to Beijing's mountainous caves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Therm Biol
July 2025
Department of Life, Health and Environmental Sciences, University of L'Aquila, Via Vetoio, 67100, L'Aquila, Italy.
Groundwater ecosystems play a pivotal role in global biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, yet they face increasing pressures from climate change. The amphipod genus Niphargus, a dominant taxon in European groundwater habitats, has shown evidence of broad thermal adaptability that challenges prevailing theories on narrow thermal niches in groundwater species. This study investigated the locomotory behaviour of Niphargus longicaudatus (Costa, 1851), a stygobitic amphipod, under habitat temperature (9 °C) and preferred temperature (15 °C) using 3D tracking techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Evol
July 2025
State Key Laboratory of Animal Biodiversity Conservation and Integrated Pest Management, and Key Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Science, Beijing 100101, China.
Regression traits such as pigmentation loss in cave-dwelling species offer powerful models for understanding evolutionary mechanisms under extreme environments. In this study, we investigated the genetic and evolutionary mechanisms underlying pigmentation loss in the cavefish Triplophysa rosa, a depigmented, eyeless species endemic to subterranean habitats. Compared with its surface-dwelling relative T.
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