| Literature DB >> 20628613 |
Marcelo V Kitahara1, Stephen D Cairns, Jarosław Stolarski, David Blair, David J Miller.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Classical morphological taxonomy places the approximately 1400 recognized species of Scleractinia (hard corals) into 27 families, but many aspects of coral evolution remain unclear despite the application of molecular phylogenetic methods. In part, this may be a consequence of such studies focusing on the reef-building (shallow water and zooxanthellate) Scleractinia, and largely ignoring the large number of deep-sea species. To better understand broad patterns of coral evolution, we generated molecular data for a broad and representative range of deep sea scleractinians collected off New Caledonia and Australia during the last decade, and conducted the most comprehensive molecular phylogenetic analysis to date of the order Scleractinia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20628613 PMCID: PMC2900217 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Phylogenetic analyses based on Bayesian inference and Maximum likelihood of the partial mitochondrial CO1 gene from 234 scleractinian species, 11 corallimorpharians, 2 actiniarians, 3 zoanthids, 1 antipatharian, and 4 octocorallians.
Topology was reconstructed under the GTR+I+G model of nucleotide evolution in MrBayes. Numbers on branches show Sh-like support (top) calculated using PhyML, and posterior probability (bottom) calculated using MrBayes. Hyphen (−) indicates no support from the respective method. (A) Zoanthids, actiniarians, and antipatharian clade. (B) Corallimorpharian clade. (C) “Basal” and “complex” scleractinian clades. (D) “Robust” scleractinian clade. Colored names indicate families with azooxanthellate representatives that morphological revisions need to be carried out. Asterisks indicate azooxanthellate deep-water scleractinians, carets indicate azooxanthellate shallow-water scleractinians, and plus signs indicate facultative scleractinians.
Nucleotide composition, proportion of invariant sites (Pinv), transition vs transversion rate (Ts/Tv), average distance between sequences (DS), and average distance between clades calculated based on GTR+I+G evolution model.
| Clades | Nucleotide composition (%) | Pinv (%) | Ts/Tv | DS (%) | Average distance between clades (%) | ||||||
| A | T | C | G | R | C | B | S | ||||
| R | 22.8 | 39.1 | 15.0 | 22.9 | 32.5 | 2.084 | 8 | - | - | - | - |
| C | 22.7 | 39.0 | 16.8 | 21.3 | 33.6 | 2.565 | 8 | 19.1 | - | - | - |
| B | 22.0 | 35.9 | 18.0 | 23.9 | 69.8 | 2.954 | 8 | 20.1 | 12.3 | - | - |
| S | 22.7 | 38.7 | 15.7 | 22.7 | 27.4 | 2.210 | 13 | - | - | - | - |
| Co | 23.4 | 35.7 | 17.5 | 23.3 | 35.1 | 2.666 | 4 | 19.6 | 13.2 | 13.2 | 17.4 |
| A | 24.1 | 37.6 | 16.7 | 21.5 | 28.8 | 2.354 | 14 | - | - | - | - |
R = “Robust” scleractinian clade.
C = “Complex” scleractinian clade.
B = “Basal” scleractinian clade.
S = Scleractinia clade (robust + complex + basal).
Co = Corallimorpharia clade.
A = All alignment (including Octocorallia, Antipatharia, Zoanthidea, Actiniaria, Corallimorpharia, Scleractinia).