Scorched mussels (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE: BRACHIDONTINAE) from the temperate coasts of South America: Phylogenetic relationships, trans-Pacific connections and the footprints of Quaternary glaciations

[Display omitted] •Monophyletic BRACHIDONTINAE (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE) consist of 3 clades and 5 genera.•Austromytilus and Perumytilus likely diverged after Eocene breakup of southern shelfs.•Perumytilus includes two clades, warm (SE Pacific) and cold temperate (Magellanic).•S Clade hypothesized to ha...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2015-01, Vol.82, p.60-74
Hauptverfasser: Trovant, Berenice, Orensanz, J.M. (Lobo), Ruzzante, Daniel E., Stotz, Wolfgang, Basso, Néstor G.
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container_start_page 60
container_title Molecular phylogenetics and evolution
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creator Trovant, Berenice
Orensanz, J.M. (Lobo)
Ruzzante, Daniel E.
Stotz, Wolfgang
Basso, Néstor G.
description [Display omitted] •Monophyletic BRACHIDONTINAE (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE) consist of 3 clades and 5 genera.•Austromytilus and Perumytilus likely diverged after Eocene breakup of southern shelfs.•Perumytilus includes two clades, warm (SE Pacific) and cold temperate (Magellanic).•S Clade hypothesized to have originated by isolation during Pleistocente glaciations. This study addresses aspects of the phylogeny and phylogeography of scorched mussels (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE: BRACHIDONTINAE) from southern South America (Argentina and Chile), as well as their ecophylogenetic implications. Relationships were inferred from sequences of two nuclear (28S and 18S) and one mitochondrial (COI) genes, using Bayesian and maximum likelihood analyses. Our results indicate that the monophyletic BRACHIDONTINAE include three well supported clades: [i] Brachidontes Swainson (=Hormomya Mörch), [ii] Ischadium Jukes-Browne+Geukensia van de Poel, and [iii] Austromytilus Laseron+Mytilisepta Habe (usually considered a member of the SEPTIFERINAE)+Perumytilus Olsson. Species of clade [iii] are distributed along the temperate coasts of the Pacific Ocean. Available evidence supports divergence between Austromytilus (Australia) and Perumytilus (South American) following the breakup of Australian, Antarctic and South American shelves. Four brachidontins occur in southern South America: Brachidontes rodriguezii (d’Orbigny), B. granulatus (Hanley), and two genetically distinct clades of Perumytilus. The latter are confined to the Chile-Peru (North Clade) and Magellanic (South Clade) Biogeographic Provinces, respectively warm- and cold-temperate. The South Clade is the only brachidontin restricted to cold-temperate waters. Biogeographic considerations and the fossil record prompted the hypothesis that the South Clade originated from the North Clade by incipient peripatric differentiation, followed by isolation during the Quaternary glaciations, genetic differentiation in the non-glaciated coasts of eastern Patagonia, back-expansion over southern Chile following post-LGM de-glaciation, and development of a secondary contact zone between the two clades in south-central Chile. Evidence of upper Pleistocene expansion of the South Clade parallels similar results on other organisms that have colonized coastal ecosystems from eastern Patagonia since the LGM, apparently occupying free ecological space. We emphasize that the assembly of communities cannot be explained solely in terms of environmental drivers,
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ympev.2014.10.002
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(Lobo) ; Ruzzante, Daniel E. ; Stotz, Wolfgang ; Basso, Néstor G.</creator><creatorcontrib>Trovant, Berenice ; Orensanz, J.M. (Lobo) ; Ruzzante, Daniel E. ; Stotz, Wolfgang ; Basso, Néstor G.</creatorcontrib><description>[Display omitted] •Monophyletic BRACHIDONTINAE (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE) consist of 3 clades and 5 genera.•Austromytilus and Perumytilus likely diverged after Eocene breakup of southern shelfs.•Perumytilus includes two clades, warm (SE Pacific) and cold temperate (Magellanic).•S Clade hypothesized to have originated by isolation during Pleistocente glaciations. This study addresses aspects of the phylogeny and phylogeography of scorched mussels (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE: BRACHIDONTINAE) from southern South America (Argentina and Chile), as well as their ecophylogenetic implications. Relationships were inferred from sequences of two nuclear (28S and 18S) and one mitochondrial (COI) genes, using Bayesian and maximum likelihood analyses. 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Biogeographic considerations and the fossil record prompted the hypothesis that the South Clade originated from the North Clade by incipient peripatric differentiation, followed by isolation during the Quaternary glaciations, genetic differentiation in the non-glaciated coasts of eastern Patagonia, back-expansion over southern Chile following post-LGM de-glaciation, and development of a secondary contact zone between the two clades in south-central Chile. Evidence of upper Pleistocene expansion of the South Clade parallels similar results on other organisms that have colonized coastal ecosystems from eastern Patagonia since the LGM, apparently occupying free ecological space. 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(Lobo)</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Ruzzante, Daniel E.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Stotz, Wolfgang</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Basso, Néstor G.</creatorcontrib><title>Scorched mussels (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE: BRACHIDONTINAE) from the temperate coasts of South America: Phylogenetic relationships, trans-Pacific connections and the footprints of Quaternary glaciations</title><title>Molecular phylogenetics and evolution</title><addtitle>Mol Phylogenet Evol</addtitle><description>[Display omitted] •Monophyletic BRACHIDONTINAE (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE) consist of 3 clades and 5 genera.•Austromytilus and Perumytilus likely diverged after Eocene breakup of southern shelfs.•Perumytilus includes two clades, warm (SE Pacific) and cold temperate (Magellanic).•S Clade hypothesized to have originated by isolation during Pleistocente glaciations. 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Four brachidontins occur in southern South America: Brachidontes rodriguezii (d’Orbigny), B. granulatus (Hanley), and two genetically distinct clades of Perumytilus. The latter are confined to the Chile-Peru (North Clade) and Magellanic (South Clade) Biogeographic Provinces, respectively warm- and cold-temperate. The South Clade is the only brachidontin restricted to cold-temperate waters. Biogeographic considerations and the fossil record prompted the hypothesis that the South Clade originated from the North Clade by incipient peripatric differentiation, followed by isolation during the Quaternary glaciations, genetic differentiation in the non-glaciated coasts of eastern Patagonia, back-expansion over southern Chile following post-LGM de-glaciation, and development of a secondary contact zone between the two clades in south-central Chile. Evidence of upper Pleistocene expansion of the South Clade parallels similar results on other organisms that have colonized coastal ecosystems from eastern Patagonia since the LGM, apparently occupying free ecological space. 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(Lobo)</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Ruzzante, Daniel E.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Stotz, Wolfgang</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Basso, Néstor G.</creatorcontrib><collection>Medline</collection><collection>MEDLINE</collection><collection>MEDLINE (Ovid)</collection><collection>MEDLINE</collection><collection>MEDLINE</collection><collection>PubMed</collection><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>MEDLINE - Academic</collection><jtitle>Molecular phylogenetics and evolution</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Trovant, Berenice</au><au>Orensanz, J.M. (Lobo)</au><au>Ruzzante, Daniel E.</au><au>Stotz, Wolfgang</au><au>Basso, Néstor G.</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Scorched mussels (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE: BRACHIDONTINAE) from the temperate coasts of South America: Phylogenetic relationships, trans-Pacific connections and the footprints of Quaternary glaciations</atitle><jtitle>Molecular phylogenetics and evolution</jtitle><addtitle>Mol Phylogenet Evol</addtitle><date>2015-01</date><risdate>2015</risdate><volume>82</volume><spage>60</spage><epage>74</epage><pages>60-74</pages><issn>1055-7903</issn><eissn>1095-9513</eissn><abstract>[Display omitted] •Monophyletic BRACHIDONTINAE (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE) consist of 3 clades and 5 genera.•Austromytilus and Perumytilus likely diverged after Eocene breakup of southern shelfs.•Perumytilus includes two clades, warm (SE Pacific) and cold temperate (Magellanic).•S Clade hypothesized to have originated by isolation during Pleistocente glaciations. This study addresses aspects of the phylogeny and phylogeography of scorched mussels (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE: BRACHIDONTINAE) from southern South America (Argentina and Chile), as well as their ecophylogenetic implications. Relationships were inferred from sequences of two nuclear (28S and 18S) and one mitochondrial (COI) genes, using Bayesian and maximum likelihood analyses. Our results indicate that the monophyletic BRACHIDONTINAE include three well supported clades: [i] Brachidontes Swainson (=Hormomya Mörch), [ii] Ischadium Jukes-Browne+Geukensia van de Poel, and [iii] Austromytilus Laseron+Mytilisepta Habe (usually considered a member of the SEPTIFERINAE)+Perumytilus Olsson. Species of clade [iii] are distributed along the temperate coasts of the Pacific Ocean. Available evidence supports divergence between Austromytilus (Australia) and Perumytilus (South American) following the breakup of Australian, Antarctic and South American shelves. Four brachidontins occur in southern South America: Brachidontes rodriguezii (d’Orbigny), B. granulatus (Hanley), and two genetically distinct clades of Perumytilus. The latter are confined to the Chile-Peru (North Clade) and Magellanic (South Clade) Biogeographic Provinces, respectively warm- and cold-temperate. The South Clade is the only brachidontin restricted to cold-temperate waters. Biogeographic considerations and the fossil record prompted the hypothesis that the South Clade originated from the North Clade by incipient peripatric differentiation, followed by isolation during the Quaternary glaciations, genetic differentiation in the non-glaciated coasts of eastern Patagonia, back-expansion over southern Chile following post-LGM de-glaciation, and development of a secondary contact zone between the two clades in south-central Chile. Evidence of upper Pleistocene expansion of the South Clade parallels similar results on other organisms that have colonized coastal ecosystems from eastern Patagonia since the LGM, apparently occupying free ecological space. We emphasize that the assembly of communities cannot be explained solely in terms of environmental drivers, as history also matters.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Elsevier Inc</pub><pmid>25451805</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.ympev.2014.10.002</doi><tpages>15</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Animals
Australia
Bayes Theorem
Biological Evolution
Dispersal
Glaciations
Likelihood Functions
Models, Genetic
Mussels
Mytilidae - classification
Mytilidae - genetics
Phylogeny
Phylogeography
Sequence Analysis, DNA
South America
Southern South America
title Scorched mussels (BIVALVIA: MYTILIDAE: BRACHIDONTINAE) from the temperate coasts of South America: Phylogenetic relationships, trans-Pacific connections and the footprints of Quaternary glaciations
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