| Literature DB >> 21672233 |
Alvin Alejandrino1, Louise Puslednik, Jeanne M Serb.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We employed a phylogenetic framework to identify patterns of life habit evolution in the marine bivalve family Pectinidae. Specifically, we examined the number of independent origins of each life habit and distinguished between convergent and parallel trajectories of life habit evolution using ancestral state estimation. We also investigated whether ancestral character states influence the frequency or type of evolutionary trajectories.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21672233 PMCID: PMC3129317 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Descriptions of life habit classes in the Pectinidae
| Life habit | Description | Genera included in study | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nestle | Settle and byssally attach to living | [ | |
| Cement | Permanently attaches to hard or heavy substratum as new shell is generated | [ | |
| Byssal attach | Temporarily attaches to a substratum by byssus threads; can release and reorient | [ | |
| Recess | Excavates cavity in soft sediment; full/partial concealment | [ | |
| Free-living | Rests above soft sediment or hard substratum | [ | |
| Gliding | Able to swim > 5 m/effort; includes a level swimming phase with a glide component | [ | |
Species-specific classes are the predominant life habit exhibited by sexually mature individuals listed from least to most active. An asterisk indicates multiple life habits are exhibited within the genus.
Figure 1Bayesian Inference majority-rule consensus topology. Posterior probability support values (> 50) above respective nodes. Branch colors represent MP reconstruction of life habit and pie charts represent their relative probabilities from ML reconstructions. If probability of ML reconstruction equals 1.0, no pie chart is given. ML ancestral state reconstructions are used to illustrate the 17 life habit transitions described in the text. Dashed boxed represent densest taxonomic sampling.
Transitions between life habit states determined from ancestral state reconstruction on the Bayesian topology
| Behavioral transition | Number of observed |
|---|---|
| Recessing to permanent attachment | 0 |
| Recessing to byssal attachment | 0 |
| Recessing to free-living | 0 |
| Recessing to gliding | 2 |
| Permanent attachment* to byssal attachment | 0 |
| Permanent attachment to free-living | 0 |
| Permanent attachment to recessing | 0 |
| Permanent attachment to gliding | 0 |
| Byssal attachment to permanent attachment | 3 (2 cementing; 1 nestling) |
| Byssal attachment to free-living | 6 |
| Byssal attachment to recessing | 1 |
| Byssal attachment to gliding | 2 |
| Free-living to permanent attachment | 0 |
| Free-living to byssal attachment | 1 |
| Free-living to recessing | 1 |
| Free-living to gliding | 0 |
| Gliding to permanent attachment | 0 |
| Gliding to byssal attachment | 0 |
| Gliding to recessing | 0 |
| Gliding to free-living | 1 |
*Cementing and nestling are grouped together under permanent attachment.