AI Article Synopsis

  • - The family Chrysogorgiidae, which contains octocorals found primarily in deep waters, is highlighted for studying biodiversity and evolutionary processes in the deep sea, supported by the first detailed phylogenetic analysis of its generas.
  • - Researchers used mitochondrial and nuclear genetic markers to analyze phylogenetic relationships among 10 of the 14 Chrysogorgiidae genera, revealing that the family is polyphyletic, with some genera being more closely related to other families rather than to each other.
  • - The study found that strictly deep-sea Chrysogorgiidae genera diversified in their deep-water environments, while some species previously identified in shallower depths suggest a possible emergence from these areas, indicating complex patterns of origin

Article Abstract

The diversity, ubiquity and prevalence in deep waters of the octocoral family Chrysogorgiidae Verrill, 1883 make it noteworthy as a model system to study radiation and diversification in the deep sea. Here we provide the first comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of the Chrysogorgiidae, and compare phylogeny and depth distribution. Phylogenetic relationships among 10 of 14 currently-described Chrysogorgiidae genera were inferred based on mitochondrial (mtMutS, cox1) and nuclear (18S) markers. Bathymetric distribution was estimated from multiple sources, including museum records, a literature review, and our own sampling records (985 stations, 2345 specimens). Genetic analyses suggest that the Chrysogorgiidae as currently described is a polyphyletic family. Shallow-water genera, and two of eight deep-water genera, appear more closely related to other octocoral families than to the remainder of the monophyletic, deep-water chrysogorgiid genera. Monophyletic chrysogorgiids are composed of strictly (Iridogorgia Verrill, 1883, Metallogorgia Versluys, 1902, Radicipes Stearns, 1883, Pseudochrysogorgia Pante & France, 2010) and predominantly (Chrysogorgia Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1864) deep-sea genera that diversified in situ. This group is sister to gold corals (Primnoidae Milne Edwards, 1857) and deep-sea bamboo corals (Keratoisidinae Gray, 1870), whose diversity also peaks in the deep sea. Nine species of Chrysogorgia that were described from depths shallower than 200 m, and mtMutS haplotypes sequenced from specimens sampled as shallow as 101 m, suggest a shallow-water emergence of some Chrysogorgia species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3377635PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0038357PLOS

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