Phylogenomic analyses of deep gastropod relationships reject Orthogastropoda

Author:

Zapata Felipe1,Wilson Nerida G.2,Howison Mark3ORCID,Andrade Sónia C. S.4,Jörger Katharina M.56,Schrödl Michael56,Goetz Freya E.1,Giribet Gonzalo4,Dunn Casey W.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02906, USA

2. Western Australian Museum, Welshpool, WA 6106, Australia

3. Center for Computation and Visualization, Brown University, Providence, RI 02906, USA

4. Museum of Comparative Zoology, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA

5. SNSB-Bavarian State Collection of Zoology, Munich 81247, Germany

6. Department Biology II, BioZentrum, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Planegg-Martinsried 82152, Germany

Abstract

Gastropods are a highly diverse clade of molluscs that includes many familiar animals, such as limpets, snails, slugs and sea slugs. It is one of the most abundant groups of animals in the sea and the only molluscan lineage that has successfully colonized land. Yet the relationships among and within its constituent clades have remained in flux for over a century of morphological, anatomical and molecular study. Here, we re-evaluate gastropod phylogenetic relationships by collecting new transcriptome data for 40 species and analysing them in combination with publicly available genomes and transcriptomes. Our datasets include all five main gastropod clades: Patellogastropoda, Vetigastropoda, Neritimorpha, Caenogastropoda and Heterobranchia. We use two different methods to assign orthology, subsample each of these matrices into three increasingly dense subsets, and analyse all six of these supermatrices with two different models of molecular evolution. All 12 analyses yield the same unrooted network connecting the five major gastropod lineages. This reduces deep gastropod phylogeny to three alternative rooting hypotheses. These results reject the prevalent hypothesis of gastropod phylogeny, Orthogastropoda. Our dated tree is congruent with a possible end-Permian recovery of some gastropod clades, namely Caenogastropoda and some Heterobranchia subclades.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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