Morphology and phylogenetic significance of the pelvic articular region in elasmobranchs (Chondrichthyes)

Author:

da Silva João Paulo C. B.1,Vaz Diego F. B.23

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Sistemática e Ecologia, Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Natureza Universidade Federal da Paraíba Castelo Branco João Pessoa 58051‐900 Brazil

2. Museum of Comparative Zoology Harvard University 26 Oxford Street Cambridge MA 02143 USA

3. Biorepository Collaboratorium Guam EPSCoR, Marine Laboratory University of Guam 303 University Dr, UOG Station Mangilao GU 96923 USA

Abstract

AbstractThe morphology of paired fins is commonly overlooked in morphological studies, particularly the pelvic girdle and fins. Consequently, previous phylogenetic studies incorporating morphological data used few skeletal characters from this complex. In this paper, the phylogenetic significance of pelvic articular characters for elasmobranchs is discussed in light of the morphological variation observed in 130 species, the most comprehensive study exploring the morphology of the pelvic girdle done so far. The 10 morphological characters proposed herein for the pelvic articulation were incorporated into a molecular matrix of NADH2 sequences and submitted to an analysis of maximum parsimony employing extended implied weighting. The most stable tree was selected based on the distortion coefficients, SPR distances (subtree pruning and regrafting) and fit values. Some of the striking synapomorphies recovered within elasmobranchs include the presence of an articular surface for the first enlarged pelvic radial supporting Elasmobranchii and the pelvic articular region for the basipterygium extending from the posterolatral margin of the pelvic girdle over its lateral surface inEchinorhinus + Hexanchiformes. Additionally, the proposed characters and their distributions are discussed considering the relationships recovered and also compared with previous morphological and molecular phylogenetic hypotheses.

Funder

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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