Phylogenomics of Neogastropoda: The Backbone Hidden in the Bush

Author:

Fedosov Alexander E12ORCID,Zaharias Paul2ORCID,Lemarcis Thomas2,Modica Maria Vittoria23,Holford Mandë456,Oliverio Marco27,Kantor Yuri I28,Puillandre Nicolas2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology, Swedish Museum of Natural History , Box 50007, 10405 Stockholm , Sweden

2. Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, CNRS , Sorbonne Université, EPHE, Université des Antilles, 57 rue Cuvier, CP 50, 75005 Paris , France

3. Department of Biology and Evolution of Marine Organisms, Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn , Villa Comunale, 80121 Naples , Italy

4. Department of Chemistry, Hunter College, Belfer Research Building, City University of New York , 413 E. 69th Street, BRB 424, New York, NY 10021 , USA

5. Department of Invertebrate Zoology, the American Museum of Natural History , New York, NY 10024 , USA

6. PhD Programs in Biology, Biochemistry, and Chemistry, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York , New York, NY 10016 , USA

7. Department of Biology and Biotechnologies “Charles Darwin,” Sapienza University of Rome, Viale dell’Università 32, I-00185 Rome , Italy

8. Department of Ecology and Morphology of Marine Invertebrates, A.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences , Leninsky prospect, 33, 119071 Moscow , Russia

Abstract

Abstract The molluskan order Neogastropoda encompasses over 15,000 almost exclusively marine species playing important roles in benthic communities and in the economies of coastal countries. Neogastropoda underwent intensive cladogenesis in the early stages of diversification, generating a “bush” at the base of their evolutionary tree, which has been hard to resolve even with high throughput molecular data. In the present study to resolve the bush, we use a variety of phylogenetic inference methods and a comprehensive exon capture dataset of 1817 loci (79.6% data occupancy) comprising 112 taxa of 48 out of 60 Neogastropoda families. Our results show consistent topologies and high support in all analyses at (super)family level, supporting monophyly of Muricoidea, Mitroidea, Conoidea, and, with some reservations, Olivoidea and Buccinoidea. Volutoidea and Turbinelloidea as currently circumscribed are clearly paraphyletic. Despite our analyses consistently resolving most backbone nodes, 3 prove problematic: First, the uncertain placement of Cancellariidae, as the sister group to either a Ficoidea-Tonnoidea clade or to the rest of Neogastropoda, leaves monophyly of Neogastropoda unresolved. Second, relationships are contradictory at the base of the major “core Neogastropoda” grouping. Third, coalescence-based analyses reject monophyly of the Buccinoidea in relation to Vasidae. We analyzed phylogenetic signal of targeted loci in relation to potential biases, and we propose the most probable resolutions in the latter 2 recalcitrant nodes. The uncertain placement of Cancellariidae may be explained by orthology violations due to differential paralog loss shortly after the whole genome duplication, which should be resolved with a curated set of longer loci.

Funder

Molluscan Science Foundation

Russian Science Foundation

European Research Council

European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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