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Molecular investigation of the evolutionary origins of hydrothermal vent gastropods

Hydrothermal vent communities exhibit great taxonomic novelty with 88% of
species, 51% of genera, and 21% of families new to science. Given the severe
physiological barriers to invasion presented by hydrothermalism and the energetic
independence of the community due to in situ primary production by chemoautotrophic
bacteria, it has been previously proposed that hydrothermal vents may have acted as a
refugia for groups of metazoan animals that originated during the Cambrian, Paleozoic, or
Mesozoic. The alternate explanation is of rapid change of recent immigrants from the
adjacent deep-sea and false taxonomic inflation. Six major groups of hydrothermal vent
endemic gastropods exhibit high taxonomic novelty and a lack of known fossils.
Discovery of these hydrothermal vent endemic groups has resulted in dramatic changes in
how we view the evolution and phylogeny of the Gastropoda, particularly in regards to the
novel anatomy of the Neomphalina (Neomphalidae + Peltospiridae). Recent cladistic
examinations of gastropod phylogeny using anatomical and morphological characters
disagree on the placement and monophyly of the Neomphalina or find few characters
supporting their position in the overall gastropod phylogeny. In this dissertation, a
molecular systematic investigation of gastropod phylogeny was performed to examine the
antiquity of the vent endemic Neomphalina.
Twenty-three new D1 domain and thirty new D6 domain DNA sequences of the 28S ribosomal RNA gene were obtained from fresh-frozen and formalin-ethanol preserved specimens. These were combined with previously published molluscan 28S ribosomal
RNA sequences for a total of 159 sequences. Gastropod phylogeny was examined using
both parsimony and distance-based analyses. The 28S ribosomal RNA gene exhibited
saturation of substitutions beyond 15% divergence between sequences, estimated using
Kimura’s two-parameter model. Alone, either domain exhibited poor resolution of
gastropod phylogeny but together (32 genera only) monophyly of the Neritimorpha,
Neomphalina, Vetigastropoda, Patellogastropoda, Caenogastropoda (including Viviparus,
Ampullaria, and Campanile), and Heterobranchia (Euthyneura plus Valvata) was
supported by bootstrap values. Relationships among these groups could not be resolved
due to saturation of substitutions. Evidence of elevated evolutionary rates in the
Patellogastropoda conformed to previous studies and confounded analyses. Regardless,
the hydrothermal vent Neomphalina exhibited divergence values and phylogenetic novelty
equivalent to the other early-Paleozoic radiations, supporting its consideration as a vent
refugial phylogenetic relic.
28S ribosomal RNA sequences cannot resolve Cambrian or early Paleozoic
radiations of the Gastropoda and use of diverse specimens limits reliability of sub-ordinal
relationships due to long-branch attraction. Sequences of 28S ribosomal RNA are best
used to examine within-order gastropod relationships due to saturation of substitutions at
higher levels and among-order evolutionary rate variation. / Graduate

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uvic.ca/oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/8125
Date17 May 2017
CreatorsMcArthur, Andrew Grant
ContributorsTunnicliffe, Verena, Koop, Benjamin F.
Source SetsUniversity of Victoria
LanguageEnglish, English
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
RightsAvailable to the World Wide Web

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