Author:
Brown S.,Rouse G.,Hutchings P.,Colgan D.
Abstract
DNA sequence data from for histone H3 (34 species), U2 snRNA (34 species) and
two segments (D1 and D9–10 expansion regions) of 28S rDNA (28 and 26
species, respectively) have been collected to investigate the relationships of
polychaetes. Representatives of all of the major morphologically identified
clades were used, as well as members of the Sipuncula, Echiura, Turbellaria,
Clitellata and Siboglinidae (formerly the phyla Pogonophora and
Vestimentifera).
Maximum parsimony analyses of the separate data sets gave conflicting results
and none conformed closely to previous results based on morphology. Instead
each data set provided corroboration of a few of the morphological groupings,
usually pairing, though inconsistently, members of the same family. Higher
groupings proposed on morphological grounds were rarely recovered.
Maximum parsimony analysis of the combined data, excluding areas of uncertain
alignment, recovered some morphological groupings such as Cirratulidae,
Terebellidae, scale worms and eunicimorphs, and did not significantly
contradict others. However, some expected groupings were not recovered.
Surprisingly, the fanworms (Sabellidae and Serpulidae) were not shown as
sister taxa, and monophyly of Phyllodocida, a morphologically well
corroborated clade, required four more steps than most parsimonious trees.
Aciculata was not seen in our analyses, although it was the most strongly
supported large clade in Rouse and Fauchald (1997, Cladistics and polychaetes.
Zoologica Scripta 26,
138–204). Trees constrained to show Aciculata as monophyletic were 18
steps longer than the most parsimonious trees. If trees are rooted on
sipunculans rather than the nematode, Aciculata is nearly recovered, being
rendered paraphyletic by the inclusion of the sister-pair of Oweniidae and
Chaetopteridae.
As suggested by some recent morphological and molecular analyses, Siboglinidae
and Clitellata may well have sister groups among polychaetes. The
morphologically aberrant Sternaspidae are closest to members of Terebellida in
the present analyses, supporting the placement of Rouse and Fauchald.
Interesting results deserving further assessment concern the placement of
Chaetopteridae, Oweniidae and Sipuncula.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics