Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Punctoidea (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)

A phylogenetic analysis using a combination of mitochondrial (COI, 16S) and nuclear markers (ITS2, 28S) indicated that Punctoidea, as previously interpreted, is polyphyletic. It comprises two main groups, containing northern hemisphere (Laurasian) and predominantly southern hemispher...

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Main Authors: Rodrigo B. Salvador, Fred J. Brook, Lara D. Shepherd, Martyn Kennedy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2020-06-01
Series:Zoosystematics and Evolution
Online Access:https://zse.pensoft.net/article/53660/download/pdf/
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spelling doaj-1060d04a6b8b47d09f803c62de4176ca2020-11-25T02:25:18ZengPensoft PublishersZoosystematics and Evolution1860-07432020-06-0196239741010.3897/zse.96.5366053660Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Punctoidea (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)Rodrigo B. Salvador0Fred J. Brook1Lara D. Shepherd2Martyn Kennedy3Museum of New Zealand Te Papa TongarewaBernice Pauahi Bishop MuseumMuseum of New Zealand Te Papa TongarewaUniversity of Otago A phylogenetic analysis using a combination of mitochondrial (COI, 16S) and nuclear markers (ITS2, 28S) indicated that Punctoidea, as previously interpreted, is polyphyletic. It comprises two main groups, containing northern hemisphere (Laurasian) and predominantly southern hemisphere (Gondwanan) taxa respectively, treated here as separate superfamilies. Within Punctoidea sensu stricto, Punctidae, Cystopeltidae and Endodontidae form separate monophyletic clades, but Charopidae, as currently interpreted, is paraphyletic. Most of the charopid taxa that we sequenced, including Charopa coma (Gray, 1843) and other Charopinae, grouped in a clade with Punctidae but some charopid taxa from Australia and South America grouped with Cystopeltidae. Cystopeltidae previously contained a single Australia-endemic genus, Cystopelta Tate, 1881, but our analysis suggests that it is considerably more diverse taxonomically and has a much wider distribution. For taxonomic stability, we suggest that Charopidae be retained as a family-level group for now, pending further study of the systematic relationships of its constituent taxa. A new superfamily, Discoidea, is erected here for two Northern Hemisphere families, Discidae and Oreohelicidae, which were previously assigned to Punctoidea. The North American species Radiodomus abietum, previously in Charopidae, is also here assigned to Discoidea. The phylogenetic relationships of Helicodiscidae, previously assigned to Punctoidea, were not fully resolved in our analysis, but the family is apparently closely related to Arionoidea Gray, 1840 and infraorder Limacoidei. https://zse.pensoft.net/article/53660/download/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rodrigo B. Salvador
Fred J. Brook
Lara D. Shepherd
Martyn Kennedy
spellingShingle Rodrigo B. Salvador
Fred J. Brook
Lara D. Shepherd
Martyn Kennedy
Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Punctoidea (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)
Zoosystematics and Evolution
author_facet Rodrigo B. Salvador
Fred J. Brook
Lara D. Shepherd
Martyn Kennedy
author_sort Rodrigo B. Salvador
title Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Punctoidea (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)
title_short Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Punctoidea (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)
title_full Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Punctoidea (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)
title_fullStr Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Punctoidea (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)
title_full_unstemmed Molecular phylogenetic analysis of Punctoidea (Gastropoda, Stylommatophora)
title_sort molecular phylogenetic analysis of punctoidea (gastropoda, stylommatophora)
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series Zoosystematics and Evolution
issn 1860-0743
publishDate 2020-06-01
description A phylogenetic analysis using a combination of mitochondrial (COI, 16S) and nuclear markers (ITS2, 28S) indicated that Punctoidea, as previously interpreted, is polyphyletic. It comprises two main groups, containing northern hemisphere (Laurasian) and predominantly southern hemisphere (Gondwanan) taxa respectively, treated here as separate superfamilies. Within Punctoidea sensu stricto, Punctidae, Cystopeltidae and Endodontidae form separate monophyletic clades, but Charopidae, as currently interpreted, is paraphyletic. Most of the charopid taxa that we sequenced, including Charopa coma (Gray, 1843) and other Charopinae, grouped in a clade with Punctidae but some charopid taxa from Australia and South America grouped with Cystopeltidae. Cystopeltidae previously contained a single Australia-endemic genus, Cystopelta Tate, 1881, but our analysis suggests that it is considerably more diverse taxonomically and has a much wider distribution. For taxonomic stability, we suggest that Charopidae be retained as a family-level group for now, pending further study of the systematic relationships of its constituent taxa. A new superfamily, Discoidea, is erected here for two Northern Hemisphere families, Discidae and Oreohelicidae, which were previously assigned to Punctoidea. The North American species Radiodomus abietum, previously in Charopidae, is also here assigned to Discoidea. The phylogenetic relationships of Helicodiscidae, previously assigned to Punctoidea, were not fully resolved in our analysis, but the family is apparently closely related to Arionoidea Gray, 1840 and infraorder Limacoidei.
url https://zse.pensoft.net/article/53660/download/pdf/
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