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Evolutionary history of anglerfishes (Teleostei: Lophiiformes): a mitogenomic perspective
by
Pietsch, Theodore W
, Shedlock, Andrew M
, Orr, James W
, Miya, Masaki
, Arnold, Rachel J
, Ho, Hsuan-Ching
, Shimazaki, Mitsuomi
, Yabe, Mamoru
, Nishida, Mutsumi
, Satoh, Takashi P
in
Acquisitions & mergers
/ Anglerfishes
/ Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Animals
/ Antennarioidei
/ Bayesian analysis
/ Biogeography
/ Biological Evolution
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Coastal zone
/ Colleges & universities
/ Cretaceous
/ Deep sea
/ Deep sea environments
/ Divergence
/ Diversification
/ Dwarfism
/ Entomology
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Evolutionary genetics
/ Fishes - classification
/ Fishes - genetics
/ Fishes - physiology
/ Gene sequencing
/ Genetic aspects
/ Genetics and Population Dynamics
/ Genome, Mitochondrial
/ Genomes
/ Life Sciences
/ Lophiiformes
/ Lophioidei
/ Marine fish
/ Maximum likelihood estimation
/ Mitochondrial DNA
/ Morphology
/ Museums
/ Natural history
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Reference books
/ Research Article
/ Science
/ Shallow water
/ Species diversity
/ Taxonomy
2010
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Evolutionary history of anglerfishes (Teleostei: Lophiiformes): a mitogenomic perspective
by
Pietsch, Theodore W
, Shedlock, Andrew M
, Orr, James W
, Miya, Masaki
, Arnold, Rachel J
, Ho, Hsuan-Ching
, Shimazaki, Mitsuomi
, Yabe, Mamoru
, Nishida, Mutsumi
, Satoh, Takashi P
in
Acquisitions & mergers
/ Anglerfishes
/ Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Animals
/ Antennarioidei
/ Bayesian analysis
/ Biogeography
/ Biological Evolution
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Coastal zone
/ Colleges & universities
/ Cretaceous
/ Deep sea
/ Deep sea environments
/ Divergence
/ Diversification
/ Dwarfism
/ Entomology
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Evolutionary genetics
/ Fishes - classification
/ Fishes - genetics
/ Fishes - physiology
/ Gene sequencing
/ Genetic aspects
/ Genetics and Population Dynamics
/ Genome, Mitochondrial
/ Genomes
/ Life Sciences
/ Lophiiformes
/ Lophioidei
/ Marine fish
/ Maximum likelihood estimation
/ Mitochondrial DNA
/ Morphology
/ Museums
/ Natural history
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Reference books
/ Research Article
/ Science
/ Shallow water
/ Species diversity
/ Taxonomy
2010
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Evolutionary history of anglerfishes (Teleostei: Lophiiformes): a mitogenomic perspective
by
Pietsch, Theodore W
, Shedlock, Andrew M
, Orr, James W
, Miya, Masaki
, Arnold, Rachel J
, Ho, Hsuan-Ching
, Shimazaki, Mitsuomi
, Yabe, Mamoru
, Nishida, Mutsumi
, Satoh, Takashi P
in
Acquisitions & mergers
/ Anglerfishes
/ Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
/ Animals
/ Antennarioidei
/ Bayesian analysis
/ Biogeography
/ Biological Evolution
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Coastal zone
/ Colleges & universities
/ Cretaceous
/ Deep sea
/ Deep sea environments
/ Divergence
/ Diversification
/ Dwarfism
/ Entomology
/ Evolution
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Evolutionary genetics
/ Fishes - classification
/ Fishes - genetics
/ Fishes - physiology
/ Gene sequencing
/ Genetic aspects
/ Genetics and Population Dynamics
/ Genome, Mitochondrial
/ Genomes
/ Life Sciences
/ Lophiiformes
/ Lophioidei
/ Marine fish
/ Maximum likelihood estimation
/ Mitochondrial DNA
/ Morphology
/ Museums
/ Natural history
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Reference books
/ Research Article
/ Science
/ Shallow water
/ Species diversity
/ Taxonomy
2010
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Evolutionary history of anglerfishes (Teleostei: Lophiiformes): a mitogenomic perspective
Journal Article
Evolutionary history of anglerfishes (Teleostei: Lophiiformes): a mitogenomic perspective
2010
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Overview
Background
The teleost order Lophiiformes, commonly known as the anglerfishes, contains a diverse array of marine fishes, ranging from benthic shallow-water dwellers to highly modified deep-sea midwater species. They comprise 321 living species placed in 68 genera, 18 families and 5 suborders, but approximately half of the species diversity is occupied by deep-sea ceratioids distributed among 11 families. The evolutionary origins of such remarkable habitat and species diversity, however, remain elusive because of the lack of fresh material for a majority of the deep-sea ceratioids and incompleteness of the fossil record across all of the Lophiiformes. To obtain a comprehensive picture of the phylogeny and evolutionary history of the anglerfishes, we assembled whole mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) sequences from 39 lophiiforms (33 newly determined during this study) representing all five suborders and 17 of the 18 families. Sequences of 77 higher teleosts including the 39 lophiiform sequences were unambiguously aligned and subjected to phylogenetic analysis and divergence time estimation.
Results
Partitioned maximum likelihood analysis confidently recovered monophyly for all of the higher taxa (including the order itself) with the exception of the Thaumatichthyidae (
Lasiognathus
was deeply nested within the Oneirodidae). The mitogenomic trees strongly support the most basal and an apical position of the Lophioidei and a clade comprising Chaunacoidei + Ceratioidei, respectively, although alternative phylogenetic positions of the remaining two suborders (Antennarioidei and Ogcocephaloidei) with respect to the above two lineages are statistically indistinguishable. While morphology-based intra-subordinal relationships for relatively shallow, benthic dwellers (Lophioidei, Antennarioidei, Ogcocephaloidei, Chaunacoidei) are either congruent with or statistically indistinguishable from the present mitogenomic tree, those of the principally deep-sea midwater dwellers (Ceratioidei) cannot be reconciled with the molecular phylogeny. A relaxed molecular-clock Bayesian analysis of the divergence times suggests that all of the subordinal diversifications have occurred during a relatively short time period between 100 and 130 Myr ago (early to mid Cretaceous).
Conclusions
The mitogenomic analyses revealed previously unappreciated phylogenetic relationships among the lophiiform suborders and ceratioid familes. Although the latter relationships cannot be reconciled with the earlier hypotheses based on morphology, we found that simple exclusion of the reductive or simplified characters can alleviate some of the conflict. The acquisition of novel features, such as male dwarfism, bioluminescent lures, and unique reproductive modes allowed the deep-sea ceratioids to diversify rapidly in a largely unexploited, food-poor bathypelagic zone (200-2000 m depth) relative to the other lophiiforms occurring in shallow coastal areas.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,BMC
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