Historical DNA solves century-old mystery on sessility in freshwater gastropods.

Mol Phylogenet Evol

Institut Systématique Evolution Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, 57 rue Cuvier, 75005 Paris, France.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Extinction rates are rising, but conservation resources are limited, prompting a focus on prioritizing unique species for protection based on their evolutionary and ecological significance.* -
  • Researchers analyzed historical DNA from an old specimen of the rare snail species Helicostoa sinensis, revealing its unique evolutionary traits and confirming its classification as an ultra-rare taxon within the Bithyniidae family.* -
  • The study emphasizes the urgent need for conservation efforts that recognize and preserve the originality of invertebrate species, particularly in unique and extreme environments like river rapids.*

Article Abstract

Extinction rates are increasing unabatedly but resources available for conservation action are limited. Therefore, some conservationists are pushing for ecology- and evolution-based conservation choices, prioritizing taxa with phylogenetic and trait-based originality. Extinction of original taxa may result in a disproportionate loss of evolutionary innovations and potentially prevent transformative changes in living systems. Here, we generated historical DNA data from an almost 120-year-old syntype of the enigmatic sessile snail Helicostoa sinensis from the Three Gorges region of the Yangtze River (PR China), using a next-generation sequencing protocol developed for ancient DNA. In a broader phylogenetic context, we assessed the phylogenetic and trait-based originality of this enigmatic taxon to solve the century-old puzzle of sessility in freshwater gastropods. Our multi-locus data confirm the phylogenetic and trait-based originality of H. sinensis. It is an ultra-rare, subfamily-level taxon (Helicostoinae stat. nov.) within the family Bithyniidae, which exhibits the evolutionary innovation of sessility. While we conservatively classify H. sinensis as "Critically Endangered", there is mounting evidence of the biological annihilation of this endemic species. Although rapidly rising extinction rates in invertebrates are increasingly recognized, the potential loss of originality in these "little things that run the world" has received little attention. We therefore call for comprehensive surveys of originality in invertebrates, particularly from extreme environments such as rapids of large rivers, as a basis for urgently needed ecology- and evolution-based conservation decisions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2023.107813DOI Listing

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