Phylogenetic assessment of the halophilic Australian gastropod Coxiella and South African Tomichia resolves taxonomic uncertainties, uncovers new species and supports a Gondwanan link.

Mol Phylogenet Evol

Department of Freshwater Invertebrates, Albany Museum, and Department of Zoology and Entomology, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, 6139, South Africa. Electronic address:

Published: July 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Genetic analysis revealed a connection among three aquatic gastropod genera—Coxiella, Tomichia, and Idiopyrgus—within the family Tomichiidae, indicating the need for more thorough taxonomic research.
  • Coxiella is found in Australian salt lakes, Tomichia in southern Africa's saline and freshwater environments, and Idiopyrgus in South America, yet all three groups are under-researched in terms of their evolutionary and ecological traits.
  • Phylogenetic analyses supported a unified Tomichiidae family and identified new species and genetic lineages within Coxiella, revealing that existing descriptions do not fully capture their morphological diversity, complicating species classification.

Article Abstract

Genetic and morphological data have suggested a Gondwanan connection between the three non-marine aquatic gastropod genera Coxiella Smith, 1894, Tomichia Benson, 1851 and Idiopyrgus Pilsbry, 1911. These genera have recently been included in the family Tomichiidae Wenz, 1938, however, further assessment of the validity of this family is warranted. Coxiella is an obligate halophile that occurs in Australian salt lakes while Tomichia occurs in saline and freshwater environments in southern Africa and Idiopyrgus is a freshwater taxon from South America. Despite their novel evolutionary and ecological characteristics, Coxiella, Tomichia and Idiopyrgus are poorly studied, and the lack of a contemporary taxonomic framework restricts our ability to assess the risk of declining habitat quality to these gastropods. We used data from mitochondrial (COI and 16S) and nuclear (28S and 18S) genes in 20 species from all three genera to undertake the most comprehensive phylogenetic test of the Tomichiidae to date. Bayesian and Maximum Likelihood phylogenetic analyses of a concatenated dataset (2974 bp) of all four genes strongly supported a monophyletic Tomichiidae. The COI analysis (n = 307) identified 14 reciprocally monophyletic lineages in Coxiella that comprised eight of the nine currently described species and at least six putative new species. Four distinct genetic clades of species with somewhat distinctive morphologies were found, each of which may constitute a distinct genera. In addition, four species of Tomichia were identified, including three described and one putatively new species. Current species descriptions of Coxiella do not account for the range of morphological variation observed within most described species, and although morphology is reasonably effective at delineating between clades, it is of limited use when trying to separate closely related Coxiella species. The improved understanding of the taxonomy and diversity of Tomichia and especially Coxiella will underpin future studies and conservation planning for these taxa.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2023.107810DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

species
10
coxiella
8
described species
8
tomichia
6
phylogenetic assessment
4
assessment halophilic
4
halophilic australian
4
australian gastropod
4
gastropod coxiella
4
coxiella south
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!