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Mitogenomic phylogeny and fossil-calibrated mutation rates for all F- and M-type mtDNA genes of the largest freshwater mussel family, the Unionidae (Bivalvia).

Authors :
Zieritz, Alexandra
Froufe, Elsa
Bolotov, Ivan
Gonçalves, Duarte V
Aldridge, David C
Bogan, Arthur E
Gan, Han Ming
Gomes-Dos-Santos, André
Sousa, Ronaldo
Teixeira, Amilcar
Varandas, Simone
Zanatta, David
Lopes-Lima, Manuel
Source :
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 2021, p1088-1107. 20p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Unionidae represent an excellent model taxon for unravelling the drivers of freshwater diversity, but, phylogeographic studies on Southeast Asian taxa are hampered by lack of a comprehensive phylogeny and mutation rates for this fauna. We present complete female- (F) and male-type (M) mitogenomes of four genera of the Southeast Asian clade Contradentini+Rectidentini. We calculate substitution rates for the mitogenome, the 13 protein-coding genes, the two ribosomal units and three commonly used fragments (co1, nd1 and 16S) of both F- and M-mtDNA, based on a fossil-calibrated, mitogenomic phylogeny of the Unionidae. Phylogenetic analyses, including an M+F concatenated dataset, consistently recovers a monophyletic Gonideinae. Subfamily-level topology is congruent with that of a previous nuclear genomic study and with patterns in mitochondrial gene order, suggesting Unionidae F-type 2 as a synapomorphy of the Gonideinae. Our phylogeny indicates that the clades Contradentini+Rectidentini and Lamprotulini+Pseudodontini+Gonideini split in the early Cretaceous (~125 Mya), and that the crown group of Contradentini+Rectidentini originated in the late Cretaceous (~79 Mya). Most gonideine tribes originated during the early Palaeogene. Substitution rates were comparable to those previously published for F-type co1 and 16S for certain Unionidae and Margaritiferidae species (pairs). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00244082
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153460705
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa153