| Literature DB >> 26195030 |
Andréa T Thomaz1,2, Dahiana Arcila3,4, Guillermo Ortí5, Luiz R Malabarba6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The subfamily Stevardiinae is a diverse and widely distributed clade of freshwater fishes from South and Central America, commonly known as "tetras" (Characidae). The group was named "clade A" when first proposed as a monophyletic unit of Characidae and later designated as a subfamily. Stevardiinae includes 48 genera and around 310 valid species with many species presenting inseminating reproductive strategy. No global hypothesis of relationships is available for this group and currently many genera are listed as incertae sedis or are suspected to be non-monophyletic.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26195030 PMCID: PMC4509481 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-015-0403-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Fig. 1Relationships of Stevardiinae based on morphological studies. Phylogenetic relationships among major groups of characid and stevardiin taxa according to morphological analyses by (a) Malabarba and Weitzman [6], (b) Mirande [4], and (c) Ferreira et al. [20]. Black branches and names indicate Stevardiinae taxa. The black circle on the internal branches indicates the synapomorphic loss of the supraorbital bone in (a) and (b), a diagnostic character for Characidae sensu Oliveira et al. [12] (except for Iguanodectinae in A). Asterisks (*) indicate taxa with inseminating strategy
Fig. 2Relationships of Stevardiinae based on previous molecular studies. Phylogenetic relationships among major groups of characid and stevardiin fishes according to molecular analyses by (a) Calcagnotto et al. [7], (b) Javonillo et al. [10] and (c) Oliveira et al. [12]. Black branches and names indicate Stevardiinae taxa. The black circle on the internal branches indicates the synapomorphic loss of the supraorbital bone in (a) and (b), a diagnostic character for Characidae sensu Oliveira et al. [12]. Asterisks (*) indicate taxa with inseminating strategy
Current classification of Stevardiinae
| Tribe | Genera | No. of species |
|---|---|---|
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| 4 |
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| 3 | |
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| 2 | |
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| 2 |
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| 1 | |
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| 7 | |
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| 1 |
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| 2 | |
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| 1 |
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| 1 |
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| 13 | |
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| 2 | |
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| 1 |
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| 4 |
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| 3 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 2 | |
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| 6 | |
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| 5 | |
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| 3 |
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| 1 | |
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| 2 | |
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| 3 | |
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| 2 | |
|
| 78 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 5 | |
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| 71 | |
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| 8 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 31 | |
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| 3 | |
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| 20 | |
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| 2 | |
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| 2 | |
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| 3 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 2 | |
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| 2 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 1 | |
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| 1 |
Tribes and genera currently recognized in Stevardiinae (“clade A”). Composition of the tribes Diapomini, Glandulocaudini, Hysteronotini, Landonini, Phenacobryconini, Stevardiini, and Xenurobryconini follows [13, 19, 36]. Genera originally included in Stevardiinae [6] or subsequently by other authors indicated by superscripts matching the reference number [8, 19–21, 31, 36, 66–68]; Genera in bold were included in this study
Insemination strategy and sperm morphology
| Tribes | Inseminating species | Non-inseminating speciesa | Sperm morph. | Species analyzed for sperm morphology |
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| M3 |
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| M3 |
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| M3 |
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| M1 |
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| M2 |
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| M1 |
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Stevardiinae species with known insemination strategy and sperm morphology, based on several studies indicated by superscripts matching the reference number [19, 22, 23, 31, 34, 36, 47, 69–76]. Taxa not listed in this table indicate lack of information
aIndicates personal communication by John Burns
Summary information of molecular data analyzed in this study
| Mitochondrial | Nuclear | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16S | 12S | COI | myh6 | PTR | Rag 1 | Rag2 | |
| Number of sequences | 334 | 323 | 247 | 293 | 212 | 218 | 265 |
| Length (bp) | 574 | 429 | 522 | 621 | 537 | 1362 | 771 |
| % present data | 94 | 91 | 69 | 82 | 60 | 61 | 74 |
| Number of variable sites | 244 | 164 | 206 | 225 | 161 | 556 | 364 |
| Singletons | 46 | 29 | 4 | 21 | 22 | 100 | 84 |
| Nucleotide frequency | |||||||
| T | 22.3 | 22.7 | 31.7 | 23.7 | 24.8 | 21.9 | 22.7 |
| C | 22.4 | 25.3 | 26 | 21.7 | 26.9 | 24.1 | 25.9 |
| A | 32.2 | 30.8 | 25 | 31.4 | 27.4 | 24.9 | 24.6 |
| G | 23.1 | 21.2 | 17.4 | 23.2 | 21 | 29.1 | 26.8 |
| Overall mean genetic distance (p-value) | 0.037 (±0.004) | 0.051 (±0.006) | 0.132 (±0.008) | 0.011 (±0.002) | 0.006 (±0.002) | 0.031 (±0.007) | 0.024 (±0.004) |
DNA sequence information and composition of molecular markers used in this study. Overall mean genetic distance is an indication of the rate of evolution of each marker
Fig. 3Abbreviated tree of Stevardiinae obtained in this study. Abbreviated maximum likelihood tree of Stevardiinae obtained with RAxML summarizing relationships among Stevardiinae genera and limits of tribes. Branches leading to monophyletic genera as proposed in this study, or to outgroup clades (clade “B” and “C”) are collapsed to a single terminal. Taxa currently assigned to other genera that are included in the proposed genera are indicated in parentheses. Red sperm symbols highlight clades with inseminating strategy present and blue sperm symbols highlight clades with external fertilization confirmed: large symbols for all taxa within Xenurobryconini, Glandulocaudini, and Stevardiini and smaller symbols for some species next to corresponding genera. Bootstrap values are shown for internal branches, with values inside gray circles highlighting nodes for proposed tribes and green circles showing support for monophyletic genera proposed in this study. Full topology is displayed in Figs. 4–10 and Additional file 4
Fig. 4Section of the Stevardiinae phylogeny showing the relationships among clades “B” and “C” and Stevardiinae, and, within Stevardiinae, in the tribes Eretmobryconini and Xenurobryconini. ML tree obtained with RAxML. Single name labels several terminals when they lead to same nominal species. Type species of each genus are highlighted in green when sampled in this study. Red sperm symbols highlight taxa with insemination strategy, while blue sperm symbols highlight taxa known to have external fertilization. Sperm types are indicated by M1 – M3. Absence of any symbols next to taxon names indicates lack of knowledge about reproductive characters. Bootstrap values indicated with dots placed on internal branches according to inset caption. Section of the full topology shown on the left (shaded) is expanded on the right. Node 1 subtends Eretmobrycon (resurrected in this study; type species E. bayano) that includes all species of Bryconamericus scleroparius group (Bryconamericus species from Central America and northernmost South America)
Fig. 10Section of the Stevardiinae phylogeny showing the relationships in Diapomini (in part, continues in Figs. 8 and 9). ML tree obtained with RAxML. Single name labels several terminals when they lead to same nominal species. Type species of each genus are highlighted in green when sampled in this study. Red sperm symbols highlight taxa with insemination strategy, while blue sperm symbols highlight taxa known to have external fertilization. Sperm types are indicated by M1 – M3. Absence of any symbols next to taxon names indicates lack of knowledge about reproductive characters. Bootstrap values indicated with dots placed on internal branches according to inset caption. Section of the full topology shown on the left (shaded) is expanded on the right. Node 9 subtends Piabarchus distributed in Rio São Francisco basin and upper Paraguay (P. analis is type species). Node 10 subtends Piabina from the Rio São Francisco, upper Paraná and Paraguay basins (P. argentea is type species). Node 11 subtends Diapoma from the Paraná, Uruguay and coastal systems in southern Brazil (type species D. speculiferum)
Clade support obtained with different phylogenetic methods
| Clades | Concatenation | Species tree | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RAxML | Garli | TNT | STAR | |
| (ML) | (ML) | (MP) | ||
| Stevardiinae | 100 | 100 | 99 | yesa |
| Creagrutini | 100 | 99 | 77 | n/o |
| Diapomini | 83 | 76 | 61 | yes |
| Diapomini + | 43 | 97 | 19 | n/o |
| Eretmobryconini | 100 | 100 | 94 | yes |
| Glandulocaudini | 100 | 100 | 95 | yes |
| Hemibryconini | 100 | 99 | 82 | yes |
| Stevardiini | 100 | 100 | 98 | yes |
| Xenurobryconini | 100 | 100 | 99 | yes |
|
| 99 | 94 | 81 | yes |
|
| 60 | 63 | 49 | n/o |
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| 99 | 98 | 78 | yes |
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| 99 | 92 | 61 | n/o |
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| 100 | 100 | 86 | yes |
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| 59 | 52 | n/o | yes |
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| 35 | 74 | 38 | n/o |
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| 81 | 80 | 74 | yes |
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| 100 | 100 | 99 | yes |
Support for clades representing tribes and genera proposed in this study (Fig. 3) obtained on the basis of maximum likelihood (RAxML and Garli), parsimony (TNT), and species-tree (STAR) analyses. Bootstrap values (%) are shown when the clade was obtained with maximum likelihood and parsimony, or indicated otherwise when it was not obtained (n/o). For the STAR analysis presence (yes) or absence (no) of the clade is indicated
aSome gene trees did not support the monophyly of Stevardiinae
Fig. 9Section of the Stevardiinae phylogeny showing the relationships in Diapomini (in part, continues in Figs. 8 and 10). ML tree obtained with RAxML. Single name labels several terminals when they lead to same nominal species. Type species of each genus are highlighted in green when sampled in this study. Red sperm symbols highlight taxa with insemination strategy, while blue sperm symbols highlight taxa known to have external fertilization. Sperm types are indicated by M1 – M3. Absence of any symbols next to taxon names indicates lack of knowledge about reproductive characters. Bootstrap values indicated with dots placed on internal branches according to inset caption. Section of the full topology shown on the left (shaded) is expanded on the right. Node 6 subtends Bryconacidnus from western Amazon (type species B. ellisi non available for this study). Node 7 (continues in Fig. 10) subtends a clade from the southern range of the geographic distribution (Paraná, Paraguay, Uruguay, São Francisco and coastal basins in SE Brazil) that contains Bryconamericus sensu stricto, Piabarchus, Piabina and Diapoma. Node 8 subtends Bryconamericus sensu stricto restricted to Rio Paraná and Uruguay basins and coastal rivers in southeastern Brazil (B. exodon is type species)
Fig. 8Section of the Stevardiinae phylogeny showing relationships in Diapomini (in part, continues in Figs. 9 and 10). ML tree obtained with RAxML. Single name labels several terminals when they lead to same nominal species. Type species of each genus are highlighted in green when sampled in this study. Red sperm symbols highlight taxa with insemination strategy, while blue sperm symbols highlight taxa known to have external fertilization. Sperm types are indicated by M1 – M3. Absence of any symbols next to taxon names indicates lack of knowledge about reproductive characters. Bootstrap values indicated with dots placed on internal branches according to inset caption. Section of the full topology shown on the left (shaded) is expanded on the right. Node 5 subtends Knodus sensu stricto, widely distributed in Amazon and Orinoco basins (K. meridae is type species)
Topology tests for currently accepted taxonomic groups
| Taxon (hypothesis) | Δ In L | AU | SH | KH |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| −2214 | 0.000001** | 0** | 0** |
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| −34.4 | 0.021* | 0.031** | 0.031** |
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| −536.5 | 0.00002** | 0** | 0** |
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| −570.8 | 0.000001** | 0** | 0** |
| Stevardiini | −34.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 |
| Diapomini | −275.6 | 0.0000002** | 0** | 0** |
| Xenurobryconini | −158.9 | 0.00000003** | 0** | 0** |
| Inseminating species | −1004.6 | 0.000001** | 0** | 0** |
Results of topology tests for the monophyly of currently accepted taxonomic groups (tribes and genera) and for groups based on reproductive strategy (insemination). Tribe composition tested prior hypotheses as shown in Table 1 [13, 19, 36], genera composition as listed by [2] and for insemination strategy as in Table 2. For each group, difference in maximum likelihood score (Δ lnL) between a tree with this clade enforced with respect to the maximum likelihood tree (Figs. 3–10) is followed by p-values for three testing procedures
AU approximately unbiased test; SH Shimodaira-Hasegawa test; KH Kishino-Hasegawa test
P > 0.05; *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01
Fig. 5Section of the Stevardiinae phylogeny showing the relationships between Argopleura and the tribes Glandulocaudini and Stevardiini. ML tree obtained with RAxML. Single name labels several terminals when they lead to same nominal species. Type species of each genus are highlighted in green when sampled in this study. Red sperm symbols highlight taxa with insemination strategy, while blue sperm symbols highlight taxa known to have external fertilization. Sperm types are indicated by M1 – M3. Absence of any symbols next to taxon names indicates lack of knowledge about reproductive characters. Bootstrap values indicated with dots placed on internal branches according to inset caption. Section of the full topology shown on the left (shaded) is expanded on the right. Node 2 subtends Chrysobrycon from southwestern Amazon (type species C. hesperus was not available for this study)
Fig. 6Section of the Stevardiinae phylogeny showing the relationships in Hemibryconini. ML tree obtained with RAxML. Single name labels several terminals when they lead to same nominal species. Type species of each genus are highlighted in green when sampled in this study. Red sperm symbols highlight taxa with insemination strategy, while blue sperm symbols highlight taxa known to have external fertilization. Sperm types are indicated by M1 – M3. Absence of any symbols next to taxon names indicates lack of knowledge about reproductive characters. Bootstrap values indicated with dots placed on internal branches according to inset caption. Section of the full topology shown on the left (shaded) is expanded on the right. Node 3 subtends Hemibrycon from western Amazon, Magdalena and Orinoco basins, and Central America (type species H. polyodon)
Fig. 7Section of the Stevardiinae phylogeny showing the relationships in Creagrutini. ML tree obtained with RAxML. Single name labels several terminals when they lead to same nominal species. Type species of each genus are highlighted in green when sampled in this study. Red sperm symbols highlight taxa with insemination strategy, while blue sperm symbols highlight taxa known to have external fertilization. Sperm types are indicated by M1 – M3. Absence of any symbols next to taxon names indicates lack of knowledge about reproductive characters. Bootstrap values indicated with dots placed on internal branches according to inset caption. Section of the full topology shown on the left (shaded) is expanded on the right. Node 4 subtends Creagrutini, with Carlastyanax (C. aurocaudatus is type species) and Creagrutus (C. mulleri is type species), the latter widely distributed from Paraguay basin to Central America