Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas-Facultad de Ciencias, Laboratorio de Biología Molecular Marina (BIOMMAR), Universidad de los Andes, Carrera 1E No 18A - 10, (J 409, J309 Lab), Bogotá, Colombia; Department of Invertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, MRC-163, Smithsonian Institution, P.O. Box 37012, Washington, DC 20013-7012, USA.
Department of Oceanography, Florida State University, 117 N. Woodward Avenue, Tallahassee, FL 32306-4320, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2010 Apr;55(1):123-135. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2009.12.007. Epub 2009 Dec 16.
Bubblegum octocorals (Paragorgia and Sibogagorgia) play an important ecological role in many deep-sea ecosystems. However, these organisms are currently threatened by destructive fishing methods such as bottom trawling. Taxonomic knowledge of conservation targets is necessary for the creation and implementation of efficient conservation strategies. However, for most deep-sea coral groups this knowledge remains incomplete. For instance, despite its similarities with Paragorgia, Sibogagorgia is particular in lacking polyp sclerites, which are present in groups like Paragorgia and the Coralliidae. Although two kinds of sclerites are very similar between Paragorgia and Sibogagorgia, other characters challenge the monophyly of these genera. Here we help to clarify the taxonomy and evolutionary relationships of the bubblegum octocorals and related taxa by examining molecular data. We employed nucleotide sequences of mitochondrial (ND6, ND6-ND3 intergenic spacer, ND3, ND2, COI, msh1 and 16S) and nuclear (28S and ITS2) genomic regions from several taxa to infer molecular phylogenetics and to examine the correspondence of morphological features with the underlying genetic information. Our data strongly supported the monophyly of the genus Paragorgia, the family Coralliidae (precious corals), and a group of undescribed specimens resembling Sibogagorgia. Further morphological observations were congruent regarding the uniqueness of the undescribed specimens, here defined as a new species, Sibogagorgia cauliflora sp. nov., which occurs in both sides of the North American landmass at depths below 1700 m. This new species resembles S. dennisgordoni with branching in one plane but has fairly different radiate sclerites and significantly divergent DNA sequences. The existence of several diagnostic characters of Sibogagorgia in S. cauliflora indicates that they indeed belong to this genus. It is however remarkable that a small number of medullar canals are also found in this species; medullar canals have been considered as the main diagnostic character of Paragorgia. Thus, the evidence generated here indicates that the presence or absence of these canals per se is not a conclusively diagnostic character for either genus. The lack of internal-node resolution in the inferred phylogenetic hypotheses of these genera does not allow us to propose a clear scenario regarding the evolution of these traits.
泡泡珊瑚(Paragorgia 和 Sibogagorgia)在许多深海生态系统中发挥着重要的生态作用。然而,这些生物目前正受到底拖网等破坏性捕捞方法的威胁。保护目标的分类学知识对于制定和实施有效的保护策略是必要的。然而,对于大多数深海珊瑚群体来说,这种知识仍然不完整。例如,尽管 Sibogagorgia 与 Paragorgia 相似,但它特别缺乏珊瑚虫的硬骨片,而 Paragorgia 和 Coralliidae 等群体都有硬骨片。尽管 Paragorgia 和 Sibogorgia 之间的两种硬骨片非常相似,但其他特征挑战了这两个属的单系性。在这里,我们通过检查分子数据来帮助澄清泡泡珊瑚和相关分类群的分类学和进化关系。我们使用了来自几个分类群的线粒体(ND6、ND6-ND3 基因间隔区、ND3、ND2、COI、msh1 和 16S)和核(28S 和 ITS2)基因组区域的核苷酸序列来推断分子系统发育,并检查形态特征与潜在遗传信息的对应关系。我们的数据强烈支持 Paragorgia 属、Coralliidae 科(珍贵珊瑚)和一组类似 Sibogagorgia 的未描述标本的单系性。进一步的形态观察结果表明,这些未描述的标本是独特的,在这里被定义为一个新种,Sibogagorgia cauliflora sp. nov.,它分布在北美大陆两侧,水深在 1700 米以下。这个新种与 S. dennisgordoni 相似,在一个平面上分枝,但具有相当不同的辐射状硬骨片和显著不同的 DNA 序列。在 S. cauliflora 中存在 Sibogagorgia 的几个诊断特征表明它们确实属于这个属。然而,值得注意的是,这种物种也有少量的髓管;髓管被认为是 Paragorgia 的主要诊断特征。因此,这里产生的证据表明,这些管腔的存在与否本身并不是这两个属的决定性诊断特征。这些属的推断系统发育假说中缺乏内部节点分辨率,使得我们无法提出关于这些特征进化的明确情景。