4.5 Article

Phylogenetic relationships of North American nymphophiline gastropods based on mitochondrial DNA sequences

Journal

ZOOLOGICA SCRIPTA
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 357-366

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1046/j.1463-6409.2003.00115.x

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Phylogenetic relationships of 36 nymphophiline species representing 10 genera were inferred from mtCOI sequence data and compared to recent morphology-based classifications of this group. Parsimony and maximum likelihood analyses of the molecular data set suggested monophyly of the North American nymphophilines and a sister or otherwise close relationship between this fauna and a European species assigned to the subfamily. Results also supported a previously hypothesized close relationship between the predominantly freshwater nymphophilines and the brackish-water genus Hydrobia . Our analyses resolved a North American nymphophiline subclade composed of Floridobia , Nymphophilus , and Pyrgulopsis , and depicted the remaining North American genera (Cincinnatia , Marstonia , Notogillia , Rhapinema , Spilochlamys , Stiobia ) as either a monophyletic or paraphyletic group. Two of the large North American genera (Floridobia , Marstonia ) were supported as monophyletic groups while monophyly of Pyrgulopsis , a western North American group containing > 100 species, was equivocal. North American nymphophiline phylogeny implies that vicariance of eastern and western North American groups was followed by a secondary invasion of eastern coastal areas from the west. We attribute this to dispersal of salt-tolerant progenitors along the Gulf of Mexico coast.

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