Mitogenomic phylogeny and fossil-calibrated mutation rates for all F- And M-type mtDNA genes of the largest freshwater mussel family, the Unionidae (Bivalvia)

Alexandra Zieritz, Elsa Froufe, Ivan Bolotov, Duarte V. Gonçalves, David C. Aldridge, Arthur E. Bogan, Han Ming Gan, André Gomes-Dos-Santos, Ronaldo Sousa, Amilcar Teixeira, Simone Varandas, David Zanatta, Manuel Lopes-Lima

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

The Unionidae represent an excellent model taxon for unravelling the drivers of freshwater diversity, but, phylogeographic studies on Southeast Asian taxa are hampered by lack of a comprehensive phylogeny and mutation rates for this fauna. We present complete female- (F) and male-type (M) mitogenomes of four genera of the Southeast Asian clade Contradentini+Rectidentini. We calculate substitution rates for the mitogenome, the 13 protein-coding genes, the two ribosomal units and three commonly used fragments (co1, nd1 and 16S) of both F- and M-mtDNA, based on a fossil-calibrated, mitogenomic phylogeny of the Unionidae. Phylogenetic analyses, including an M+F concatenated dataset, consistently recovers a monophyletic Gonideinae. Subfamily-level topology is congruent with that of a previous nuclear genomic study and with patterns in mitochondrial gene order, suggesting Unionidae F-type 2 as a synapomorphy of the Gonideinae. Our phylogeny indicates that the clades Contradentini+Rectidentini and Lamprotulini+Pseudodontini+Gonideini split in the early Cretaceous (~125 Mya), and that the crown group of Contradentini+Rectidentini originated in the late Cretaceous (~79 Mya). Most gonideine tribes originated during the early Palaeogene. Substitution rates were comparable to those previously published for F-type co1 and 16S for certain Unionidae and Margaritiferidae species (pairs).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1088-1107
Number of pages20
JournalZoological Journal of the Linnean Society
Volume193
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2021

Keywords

  • evolutionary biogeography
  • mitochondrial DNA
  • palaeogeography
  • selection
  • substitution rate
  • tropical biodiversity

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