4.5 Article

Phylogenetic and morphometric analyses reveal ecophenotypic plasticity in freshwater mussels Obovaria jacksoniana and Villosa arkansasensis (Bivalvia: Unionidae)

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 3, Issue 8, Pages 2670-2683

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.649

Keywords

Isolation by distance; Law of Stream Distribution; Mantel test; mitochondrial DNA; Ortmann's law; phenotypic plasticity

Funding

  1. Arkansas Game and Fish Commission
  2. Arkansas Biosciences Institute
  3. Arkansas State University College of Science and Mathematics
  4. Arkansas State University Environmental Sciences Graduate Program

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Freshwater mollusk shell morphology exhibits clinal variation along a stream continuum that has been termed the Law of Stream Distribution. We analyzed phylogenetic relationships and morphological similarity of two freshwater mussels (Bivalvia: Unionidae), Obovaria jacksoniana and Villosa arkansasensis, throughout their ranges. The objectives were to investigate phylogenetic structure and evolutionary divergence of O.jacksoniana and V.arkansasensis and morphological similarity between the two species. Our analyses were the first explicit tests of phenotypic plasticity in shell morphologies using a combination of genetics and morphometrics. We conducted phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial DNA (1416bp; two genes) and morphometric analyses for 135 individuals of O.jacksoniana and V.arkansasensis from 12 streams. We examined correlations among genetic, morphological, and spatial distances using Mantel tests. Molecular phylogenetic analyses revealed a monophyletic relationship between O.jacksoniana and V.arkansasensis. Within this O.jacksoniana/V.arkansasensis complex, five distinct clades corresponding to drainage patterns showed high genetic divergence. Morphometric analysis revealed relative differences in shell morphologies between the two currently recognized species. We conclude that morphological differences between the two species are caused by ecophenotypic plasticity. A series of Mantel tests showed regional and local genetic isolation by distance. We observed clear positive correlations between morphological and geographic distances within a single drainage. We did not observe correlations between genetic and morphological distances. Phylogenetic analyses suggest O.jacksoniana and V.arkansasensis are synonomous and most closely related to a clade composed of O.retusa, O.subrotunda, and O.unicolor. Therefore, the synonomous O.jacksoniana and V.arkansasensis should be recognized as Obovaria arkansasensis (Lea 1862) n. comb. Phylogenetic analyses also showed relative genetic isolation among drainages, suggesting no current gene flow. Further investigation of in-progress speciation and/or cryptic species within O.arkansasensis is warranted followed by appropriate revision of conservation management designations.

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