Back to Search Start Over

Bamboozled! Resolving deep evolutionary nodes within the phylogeny of bamboo corals (Octocorallia: Scleralcyonacea: Keratoisididae).

Authors :
Morrissey, Declan
Gordon, Jessica D
Saso, Emma
Bilewitch, Jaret P.
Taylor, Michelle L.
Hayes, Vonda
McFadden, Catherine S.
Quattrini, Andrea M.
Allcock, A. Louise
Source :
Molecular Phylogenetics & Evolution. Nov2023, Vol. 188, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

[Display omitted] • For the first time, deep nodes are resolved within the Keratoisididae, a prolific deep-sea family of octocorals. • Nuclear phylogenies built with hundreds of genes conflict with previously published single and multi-gene mitochondrial phylogenies. • Some currently recognised keratoisidid groups appear polyphyletic using nuclear phylogenies built with hundreds of markers. • Sclerite microstructure and ornamentation could be future informative taxonomic features for bamboo corals. Keratoisididae is a globally distributed, and exclusively deep-sea, family of octocorals that contains species and genera that are polyphyletic. An alphanumeric system, based on a three-gene-region phylogeny, is widely used to describe the biodiversity within this family. That phylogeny identified 12 major groups although it did not have enough signal to explore the relationships among groups. Using increased phylogenomic resolution generated from Ultraconserved Elements and exons (i.e. conserved elements), we aim to resolve deeper nodes within the family and investigate the relationships among those predefined groups. In total, 109 libraries of conserved elements were generated from individuals representing both the genetic and morphological diversity of our keratoisidids. In addition, the conserved element data of 12 individuals from previous studies were included. Our taxon sampling included 11 of the 12 keratoisidid groups. We present two phylogenies, constructed from a 75% (231 loci) and 50% (1729 loci) taxon occupancy matrix respectively, using both Maximum Likelihood and Multiple Species Coalescence methods. These trees were congruent at deep nodes. As expected, S1 keratoisidids were recovered as a well-supported sister clade to the rest of the bamboo corals. S1 corals do not share the same mitochondrial gene arrangement found in other members of Keratoisididae. All other bamboo corals were recovered within two major clades. Clade I comprises individuals assigned to alphanumeric groups B1, C1, D1&D2, F1, H1, I4, and J3 while Clade II contains representatives from A1, I1, and M1. By combining genomics with already published morphological data, we provide evidence that group H1 is not monophyletic, and that the division between other groups – D1 and D2, and A1 and M1 – needs to be reconsidered. Overall, there is a lack of robust morphological markers within Keratoisididae, but subtle characters such as sclerite microstructure and ornamentation seem to be shared within groups and warrant further investigation as taxonomically diagnostic characters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10557903
Volume :
188
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular Phylogenetics & Evolution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
171921521
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2023.107910