TY - JOUR
T1 - Global diversification and evolutionary history of onchidiid slugs (Gastropoda, Pulmonata)
AU - Goulding, Tricia C.
AU - Khalil, Munawar
AU - Tan, Shau Hwai
AU - Cumming, Rebecca A.
AU - Dayrat, Benoît
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank all of our collaborators who helped make the systematic revisions of onchidiids and this work possible: Deepak Apte, Vishal Bhave, Reshma Pitale, Sudhir Sapre, C.R. Sreeraj, Rahul C. Salunkhe, Sumantha Narayana, and Yogesh Shouche in India; Joseph Comendador, Vivian Ang, Don Dumale, and Marivene Manuel in the Philippines; Ngo Quang, Pham Thanh Luu, and Trần Thành Thái in Vietnam; Tomoyuki and Mari Nakano, and Mr. Ishikawa in Japan; Richard Willan, Adam Bourke, Winston Ponder, Rosemary Golding, Neil Bruce, and Barbara Done in Australia; Gary Barker and Hamish Spencer in New Zealand; Dai Herbert, George Branch, and Charles Griffiths in South Africa; Owen Griffiths in Mauritius; Carlo Cunha and Eduardo Colley in Brazil; Abadia-Chanona Quetzalli Yasu and Omar Hernando Avila-Poveda in Mexico; Martin Thiel in Chile; Louise Page in Canada; Marnie Chapman in Alaska; Douda Faye in Senegal; Agbor Ben Baiye in Cameroon; and Sérgio Ávila in Portugal. We also thank Philippe Bouchet for providing specimens from the expeditions of the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, and Barbara Buge and Nicolas Puillandre for preparing the specimens collected during the MNHN expeditions. We thank the collection managers of various institutions for accepting to host our material in their collections and who loaned us specimens for our systematic work: Australian Museum, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (AM); Brunei Museum, Natural History, Brunei Darussalam (BDMNH); Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai, India (BNHS); Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA (BPBM); California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, California, USA (CASIZ); Institute of Tropical Biology, Zoology Collection, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam (ITBZC); Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, Paris, France (MNHN); Museum of Tropical Queensland, Townsville, Queensland, Australia (MTQ); Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom (NHMUK); KwaZulu-Natal Museum, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa (NMSA); National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo, Japan (NSMT); Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia (NTM); National Museum of the Philippines, Manila, Philippines (PNM); University of Florida, Gainesville, USA (UF); Universitas Malikussaleh, North Aceh, Sumatra, Indonesia (UMIZ); Universiti Sains Malaysia, Mollusk Collection, Penang, Malaysia (USMMC); and Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum, National University of Singapore (ZRC). A research permit was awarded to Benoît Dayrat in Singapore (#NP/RP10-020). We thank the Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education, Republic of Indonesia (Ristek-Dikti) that awarded a research permit to Benoît Dayrat (Ristek #134/SIP/FRP/E5/Dit.KI/VI/2017). We also wish to thank the Universitas Malikussaleh for being our home base institution in Indonesia. We extend our sincere thanks to Yasunori Kano and an anonymous reviewer, as well as the Editor in Chief, for their feedback on the paper. This work was supported by the Eberly College of Science at the Pennsylvania State University and by a REVSYS (Revisionary Syntheses in Systematics) award from the US National Science Foundation ( DEB 1419394 ).
Funding Information:
We thank all of our collaborators who helped make the systematic revisions of onchidiids and this work possible: Deepak Apte, Vishal Bhave, Reshma Pitale, Sudhir Sapre, C.R. Sreeraj, Rahul C. Salunkhe, Sumantha Narayana, and Yogesh Shouche in India; Joseph Comendador, Vivian Ang, Don Dumale, and Marivene Manuel in the Philippines; Ngo Quang, Pham Thanh Luu, and Trần Thành Thái in Vietnam; Tomoyuki and Mari Nakano, and Mr. Ishikawa in Japan; Richard Willan, Adam Bourke, Winston Ponder, Rosemary Golding, Neil Bruce, and Barbara Done in Australia; Gary Barker and Hamish Spencer in New Zealand; Dai Herbert, George Branch, and Charles Griffiths in South Africa; Owen Griffiths in Mauritius; Carlo Cunha and Eduardo Colley in Brazil; Abadia-Chanona Quetzalli Yasu and Omar Hernando Avila-Poveda in Mexico; Martin Thiel in Chile; Louise Page in Canada; Marnie Chapman in Alaska; Douda Faye in Senegal; Agbor Ben Baiye in Cameroon; and Sérgio Ávila in Portugal. We also thank Philippe Bouchet for providing specimens from the expeditions of the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, and Barbara Buge and Nicolas Puillandre for preparing the specimens collected during the MNHN expeditions. We thank the collection managers of various institutions for accepting to host our material in their collections and who loaned us specimens for our systematic work: Australian Museum, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (AM); Brunei Museum, Natural History, Brunei Darussalam (BDMNH); Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai, India (BNHS); Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA (BPBM); California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, California, USA (CASIZ); Institute of Tropical Biology, Zoology Collection, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam (ITBZC); Muséum national d'histoire naturelle, Paris, France (MNHN); Museum of Tropical Queensland, Townsville, Queensland, Australia (MTQ); Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom (NHMUK); KwaZulu-Natal Museum, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa (NMSA); National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo, Japan (NSMT); Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia (NTM); National Museum of the Philippines, Manila, Philippines (PNM); University of Florida, Gainesville, USA (UF); Universitas Malikussaleh, North Aceh, Sumatra, Indonesia (UMIZ); Universiti Sains Malaysia, Mollusk Collection, Penang, Malaysia (USMMC); and Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum, National University of Singapore (ZRC). A research permit was awarded to Benoît Dayrat in Singapore (#NP/RP10-020). We thank the Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education, Republic of Indonesia (Ristek-Dikti) that awarded a research permit to Benoît Dayrat (Ristek #134/SIP/FRP/E5/Dit.KI/VI/2017). We also wish to thank the Universitas Malikussaleh for being our home base institution in Indonesia. We extend our sincere thanks to Yasunori Kano and an anonymous reviewer, as well as the Editor in Chief, for their feedback on the paper. This work was supported by the Eberly College of Science at the Pennsylvania State University and by a REVSYS (Revisionary Syntheses in Systematics) award from the US National Science Foundation (DEB 1419394).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2022/3
Y1 - 2022/3
N2 - Many marine species are specialized to specific parts of a habitat. In a mangrove forest, for instance, species may be restricted to the mud surface, the roots and trunks of mangrove trees, or rotting logs, which can be regarded as distinct microhabitats. Shifts to new microhabitats may be an important driver of sympatric speciation. However, the evolutionary history of these shifts is still poorly understood in most groups of marine organisms, because it requires a well-supported phylogeny with relatively complete taxon sampling. Onchidiid slugs are an ideal case study for the evolutionary history of habitat and microhabitat shifts because onchidiid species are specialized to different tidal zones and microhabitats in mangrove forests and rocky shores, and the taxonomy of the family in the Indo-West Pacific has been recently revised in a series of monographs. Here, DNA sequences for onchidiid species from the North and East Pacific, the Caribbean, and the Atlantic are used to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships among Onchidella species, and are combined with new data for Indo-West Pacific species to reconstruct a global phylogeny of the family. The phylogenetic relationships of onchidiid slugs are reconstructed based on three mitochondrial markers (COI, 12S, 16S) and three nuclear markers (28S, ITS2, H3) and nearly complete taxon sampling (all 13 genera and 62 of the 67 species). The highly-supported phylogeny presented here suggests that ancestral onchidiids most likely lived in the rocky intertidal, and that a lineage restricted to the tropical Indo-West Pacific colonized new habitats, including mudflats, mangrove forests, and high-elevation rainforests. Many onchidiid species in the Indo-West Pacific diverged during the Miocene, around the same time that a high diversity of mangrove plants appears in the fossil record, while divergence among Onchidella species occurred earlier, likely beginning in the Eocene. It is demonstrated that ecological specialization to microhabitats underlies the divergence between onchidiid genera, as well as the diversification through sympatric speciation in the genera Wallaconchis and Platevindex. The geographic distributions of onchidiid species also indicate that allopatric speciation played a key role in the diversification of several genera, especially Onchidella and Peronia. The evolutionary history of several morphological traits (penial gland, rectal gland, dorsal eyes, intestinal loops) is examined in relation to habitat and microhabitat evolutionary transitions and that the rectal gland of onchidiids is an adaptation to high intertidal and terrestrial habitats.
AB - Many marine species are specialized to specific parts of a habitat. In a mangrove forest, for instance, species may be restricted to the mud surface, the roots and trunks of mangrove trees, or rotting logs, which can be regarded as distinct microhabitats. Shifts to new microhabitats may be an important driver of sympatric speciation. However, the evolutionary history of these shifts is still poorly understood in most groups of marine organisms, because it requires a well-supported phylogeny with relatively complete taxon sampling. Onchidiid slugs are an ideal case study for the evolutionary history of habitat and microhabitat shifts because onchidiid species are specialized to different tidal zones and microhabitats in mangrove forests and rocky shores, and the taxonomy of the family in the Indo-West Pacific has been recently revised in a series of monographs. Here, DNA sequences for onchidiid species from the North and East Pacific, the Caribbean, and the Atlantic are used to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships among Onchidella species, and are combined with new data for Indo-West Pacific species to reconstruct a global phylogeny of the family. The phylogenetic relationships of onchidiid slugs are reconstructed based on three mitochondrial markers (COI, 12S, 16S) and three nuclear markers (28S, ITS2, H3) and nearly complete taxon sampling (all 13 genera and 62 of the 67 species). The highly-supported phylogeny presented here suggests that ancestral onchidiids most likely lived in the rocky intertidal, and that a lineage restricted to the tropical Indo-West Pacific colonized new habitats, including mudflats, mangrove forests, and high-elevation rainforests. Many onchidiid species in the Indo-West Pacific diverged during the Miocene, around the same time that a high diversity of mangrove plants appears in the fossil record, while divergence among Onchidella species occurred earlier, likely beginning in the Eocene. It is demonstrated that ecological specialization to microhabitats underlies the divergence between onchidiid genera, as well as the diversification through sympatric speciation in the genera Wallaconchis and Platevindex. The geographic distributions of onchidiid species also indicate that allopatric speciation played a key role in the diversification of several genera, especially Onchidella and Peronia. The evolutionary history of several morphological traits (penial gland, rectal gland, dorsal eyes, intestinal loops) is examined in relation to habitat and microhabitat evolutionary transitions and that the rectal gland of onchidiids is an adaptation to high intertidal and terrestrial habitats.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2021.107360
DO - 10.1016/j.ympev.2021.107360
M3 - Article
C2 - 34793980
AN - SCOPUS:85121990656
SN - 1055-7903
VL - 168
JO - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
M1 - 107360
ER -