Delimiting species of marine gastropods (Turridae, Conoidea) using RAD sequencing in an integrative taxonomy framework.

Mol Ecol

Institut de Systématique Evolution Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, EPHE, Paris, France.

Published: November 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Species delimitation in poorly known groups typically uses single gene (COI) methods, whereas well-studied groups often employ multi-gene (multilocus) approaches.
  • In this study, researchers applied both methods to the Xenuroturris/Iotyrris complex, a group of venomous marine snails, analyzing sequences and constructing a phylogenetic tree.
  • The combined results led to refined species hypotheses, revealing one new species, Iotyrris conotaxis n. sp., and demonstrating the effectiveness of integrating both monolocus and multilocus data for species delimitation.

Article Abstract

Species delimitation in poorly known and diverse taxa is usually performed based on monolocus, DNA-barcoding-like approaches, while multilocus data are often used to test alternative species hypotheses in well-studied groups. We combined both approaches to delimit species in the Xenuroturris/Iotyrris complex, a group of venomous marine gastropods from the Indo-Pacific. First, COI sequences were analysed using three methods of species delimitation to propose primary species hypotheses. Second, RAD sequencing data were also obtained and a maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree produced. We tested the impact of the level of missing data on the robustness of the phylogenetic tree obtained with the RAD-seq data. Alternative species partitions revealed with the COI data set were also tested using the RAD-seq data and the Bayes factor species delimitation method. The congruence between the species hypotheses proposed with the mitochondrial nuclear data sets, together with the morphological variability of the shell and the radula and the distribution pattern, was used to turn the primary species hypotheses into secondary species hypotheses. Allopatric primary species hypotheses defined with the COI gene were interpreted to correspond to intraspecific structure. Most of the species are found sympatrically in the Philippines, and only one is confidently identified as a new species and described as Iotyrris conotaxis n. sp. The results obtained demonstrate the efficiency of the combined monolocus/multilocus approach to delimit species.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.14882DOI Listing

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