| Literature DB >> 32211227 |
Kátia C C Capel1,2, Cataixa López3,4, Irene Moltó-Martín3,4, Carla Zilberberg2,5, Joel C Creed2,6, Ingrid S S Knapp7, Mariano Hernández3,4, Zac H Forsman7, Robert J Toonen7, Marcelo V Kitahara1,8.
Abstract
Atlantia is described as a new genus pertaining to the family Dendrophylliidae (Anthozoa, Scleractinia) based on specimens from Cape Verde, eastern Atlantic. This taxon was first recognized as Enallopsammia micranthus and later described as a new species, Tubastraea caboverdiana, which then changed the status of the genus Tubastraea as native to the Atlantic Ocean. Here, based on morphological and molecular analyses, we compare fresh material of T. caboverdiana to other dendrophylliid genera and describe it as a new genus named Atlantia in order to better accommodate this species. Evolutionary reconstruction based on two mitochondrial and one nuclear marker for 67 dendrophylliids and one poritid species recovered A. caboverdiana as an isolated clade not related to Tubastraea and more closely related to Dendrophyllia cornigera and Leptopsammia pruvoti. Atlantia differs from Tubastraea by having a phaceloid to dendroid growth form with new corallites budding at an acute angle from the theca of a parent corallite. The genus also has normally arranged septa (not Portualès Plan), poorly developed columella, and a shallow-water distribution all supporting the classification as a new genus. Our results corroborate the monophyly of the genus Tubastraea and reiterate the Atlantic non-indigenous status for the genus. In the light of the results presented herein, we recommend an extensive review of shallow-water dendrophylliids from the Eastern Atlantic. ©2020 Capel et al.Entities:
Keywords: Azooxanthellate corals; Cape verde; Tubastraea
Year: 2020 PMID: 32211227 PMCID: PMC7081789 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.8633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Cycling conditions used to amplify the three target regions (COI, cytochrome c oxidades subunit I; rDNA—ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2 2 and a portion of 18S and 28S and IGR—an intragenic region between COI and trnM, trnM and a portion of the large ribosomal subunit) from two localities, Tarrafal and Mindelo.
| COI | rDNA | IGR | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tarrafal | Mindelo | Tarrafal | Mindelo | Tarrafal | |
| Cycling conditions | 3 min-95 °C | 2 min-94 °C | 3 min-95 °C | 2 min-94 °C | 3 min-95 °C |
| 10 min-72 °C | 10 min-72 °C | 10 min-72 °C | |||
| 10 min-72 °C | 5 min-72 °C | ||||
Figure 1In situ images of Atlantia caboverdiana at Cape Verde.
In situ images of Atlantia caboverdiana at Cape Verde. (A) orange color morph; (B) yellow color morph; and (C) Both color morphs growing together. Images courtesy from Oscar Ocaña Vicente.
Figure 3Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of Atlantia caboverdiana.
Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of Atlantia caboverdiana from Santiago Island, Cape Verde, showing details of septa and columella. (A–C) specimen CVL-13 and (D–F) specimen CVA-10.
Figure 4A phylogeny reconstruction of Dendrophylliidae.
Phylogenetic analyses based on Bayesian inference of the concatenated genes COI, IGR and rDNA from 75 dendrophylliid corals and Goniopora columna as external group. Black dots indicate branches with Posterior probability ≥95 and bootstrap support value ≥85. An asterisk (*) indicates a branch recovered on a different position by Maximum likelihood analyses.
| Class Anthozoa Ehrenberg, 1834 |
| Subclass Hexacorallia Haeckel, 1896 |
| Order Scleractinia Bourne, 1900 |
| Family Dendrophylliidae Gray, 1847 |