Diversity and genetic connectivity of heteropod (Pterotracheoidea) gastropods in the Tropical Eastern Pacific

Author:

Collin Rachel1ORCID,Madrid Maycol1ORCID,Venera‐Pontón Dagoberto E.1ORCID,Macdonald Kenneth S.2ORCID,De León Alexandra1,Vrdoljak Dubravka13,Boyle Michael J.4ORCID,Bryant Peter5,Arehart Tim1,Driskell Amy C.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Balboa Ancon Panama

2. Laboratories of Analytical Biology, National Museum of Natural History Smithsonian Institution Washington District of Columbia USA

3. ETH Zurich Switzerland

4. Smithsonian Marine Station Fort Pierce Florida USA

5. Department of Development and Cell Biology University of California, Irvine (Emeritus) Irvine California USA

Abstract

AbstractPrevious research focusing on pelagic gastropods in the open ocean has demonstrated that many morphospecies comprise multiple distinct clades or cryptic species that can be distinguished with DNA sequence data. To date, the genetic diversity of the pelagic gastropod fauna of the tropical East Pacific, especially in shallow coastal waters, remains largely unexplored. To document the diversity of pterotracheoids (formerly heteropods) from the coastal waters of the Bay of Panama, we collected, photographed and sequenced fragments of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) and 16S ribosomal DNA for 60 atlantids, 3 carinariids and 6 pterotracheids. In addition to the COI barcode, our results include the first published 16S sequences for these groups. We found 11 operational taxonomic units (OTUs): 9 in the genus Atlanta, 1 Carinaria and 1 Firoloida. We report the presence of Atlanta oligogyra (Clades A and B), Atlanta turriculata, Atlanta lesueurii, Atlanta helicinoidea (Clade B), Atlanta plana, Atlanta echinogyra, Atlanta inflata and Atlanta frontieri through comparisons of our sequences with previously published sequences. We did not find Atlanta gaudichaudi, Atlanta inclinata, Atlanta tokiokai, Atlanta gibbosa, Atlanta peronii, or Oxygyrus inflatus, which have previously been reported from the region. Haplotype networks and estimates of ΦST illustrate how some species show population differentiation across the tropical Indo‐Pacific region, whereas others show little apparent population structure. For example, the most common haplotypes of A. inflata and of A. turriculata occur in the Indian Ocean, the Central and West Pacific and the tropical East Pacific, whereas individuals of A. frontieri from the Indian Ocean do not share haplotypes with individuals of A. frontieri from the Pacific Ocean. Analyses were limited by sample sizes, but these data suggest that population genetics approaches may be useful for reconstructing population histories of these important, but overlooked, components of the plankton.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

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