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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The Order Stolidobranchiata comprises the families Pyuridae, Styelidae and Molgulidae. Early molecular
data was consistent with monophyly of the Stolidobranchiata and also the Molgulidae. Internal phylogeny
and relationships between Styelidae and Pyuridae were inconclusive however. In order to clarify
these points we used mitochondrial and nuclear sequences from 31 species of Styelidae and 25 of Pyuridae.
Phylogenetic trees recovered the Pyuridae as a monophyletic clade, and their genera appeared as
monophyletic with the exception of Pyura. The Styelidae, on the other hand, appeared as a paraphyletic
group split into several clades. One of them was formed by solitary oviparous species, of which the Pyuridae
were a sister group. A second clade included the colonial genera Botryllus, Botrylloides and Symplegma.
The remaining colonial and solitary genera formed several poorly resolved clades. One of the more species
genus, Polycarpa, was shown to be polyphyletic, and the species Styela plicata grouped into two
genetically distant clades suggesting the existence of two cryptic species. The internal phylogeny of Styelidae
has bearings on the origin of coloniality in this family. We suggest to abandon the traditional division
of colonial forms into social and compound species and use instead the categories of aggregated
colonies that do not have common vascular systems, and integrated colonies, that do possess such systems.
Our molecular results indicate that there have been several independent acquisitions of coloniality
in the Styelidae, and that viviparity may be a pre-adaptation for a colonial life-style.
Description
Keywords
Pyuridae Styelidae Stolidobranchiata Molecular phylogeny Coloniality COI 18S rDNA
Citation
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 50, 560-570