Recent diversification in an ancient lineage of Notothenioid fishes (Bovichtus: Notothenioidei)
Notothenioids are among the most intensively studied lineages of marine fishes. However, notothenioid research is predominately focused on the approximately 100 species of Antarctic cryonotothenioids. Far less attention is devoted to the non-Antarctic lineages Bovichtidae, Pseudaphritis urvillii , a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Polar biology 2019-05, Vol.42 (5), p.943-952 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Notothenioids are among the most intensively studied lineages of marine fishes. However, notothenioid research is predominately focused on the approximately 100 species of Antarctic cryonotothenioids. Far less attention is devoted to the non-Antarctic lineages Bovichtidae,
Pseudaphritis urvillii
, and
Eleginops maclovinus
, all of which originated prior to the diversification of cryonotothenioid species. Here we utilize DNA sequence data from mitochondrial and nuclear genes, as well as meristic trait morphology to investigate the evolutionary history of Bovichtidae.
Bovichtus
is the only polytypic lineage of early diverging non-Antarctic notothenioids providing a unique opportunity to contextualize the diversification dynamics of cryonotothenioids with their non-Antarctic relatives. We find strong evidence that species of
Bovichtus
represent a recent evolutionary radiation with divergence times similar to those estimated among the most closely related species of cryonotothenioids. The divergence in traditional meristic trait morphology among species of
Bovichtus
is consistent with their phylogenetic relationships. The phylogeny of
Bovichtus
implies the wide geographic distribution of species in the clade is likely the result of West Wind drift-driven dispersal. The phylogeny and divergence time estimates results reject a hypothesis that species persistence in
Bovichtus
reflects long periods of evolutionary stasis. Instead, we hypothesize that patterns of extinction and diversification in
Bovichtus
closely mirror those observed in their Antarctic relatives. |
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ISSN: | 0722-4060 1432-2056 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00300-019-02489-1 |