1. Evolutionary origin of the Atlantic Cabo Verde nibbler (Girella stuebeli), a member of a primarily Pacific Ocean family of antitropical herbivorous reef fishes.
- Author
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Beldade R, Longo GC, Clements KD, Robertson DR, Perez-Matus A, Itoi S, Sugita H, and Bernardi G
- Subjects
- Animals, Atlantic Ocean, Cabo Verde, Calibration, Geography, Mitochondria genetics, Pacific Ocean, Phylogeny, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Time Factors, Biological Evolution, Coral Reefs, Perciformes physiology
- Abstract
Nibblers (family Girellidae) are reef fishes that are mostly distributed in the Indo-Pacific, with one exception: Girella stuebeli, which is found in the Cabo Verde Archipelago, in the Atlantic Ocean. We capitalized on this unusual distribution to study the evolutionary history of the girellids, and determine the relationship between G. stuebeli and the remaining nibbler taxa. Based on thousands of genomic markers (RAD sequences), we identified the closest relatives of G. stuebeli as being a clade of three species endemic to the northwestern Pacific, restricted to the Sea of Japan and vicinity. This clade diverged from G. stuebeli approximately 2.2 Mya. Two alternative potential routes of migration may explain this affinity: a western route, from the Tropical Eastern Pacific and the Tropical Western Atlantic, and an eastern route via the Indian Ocean and Southern Africa. The geological history and oceanography of the regions combined with molecular data presented here, suggest that the eastern route of invasion (via the Indian Ocean and Southern Africa) is a more likely scenario., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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