Musée cantonal de zoologie, Palais de Rumine, place de la Riponne 6, 1014 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2013 Mar;66(3):979-91. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2012.12.003. Epub 2012 Dec 20.
The biodiversity and endemism of Madagascar are among the most extraordinary and endangered in the world. This includes the island's freshwater biodiversity, although detailed knowledge of the diversity, endemism, and biogeographic origin of freshwater invertebrates is lacking. The aquatic immature stages of mayflies (Ephemeroptera) are widely used as bio-indicators and form an important component of Malagasy freshwater biodiversity. Many species are thought to be microendemics, restricted to single river basins in forested areas, making them particularly sensitive to habitat reduction and degradation. The Heptageniidae are a globally diverse family of mayflies (>500 species) but remain practically unknown in Madagascar except for two species described in 1996. The standard approach to understanding their diversity, endemism, and origin would require extensive field sampling on several continents and years of taxonomic work followed by phylogenetic analysis. Here we circumvent this using museum collections and freshly collected individuals in a combined approach of DNA taxonomy and phylogeny. The coalescent-based GMYC analysis of DNA barcode data (mitochondrial COI) revealed 14 putative species on Madagascar, 70% of which were microendemics. A phylogenetic analysis that included African and Asian species and data from two mitochondrial and four nuclear loci indicated the Malagasy Heptageniidae are monophyletic and sister to African species. The genus Compsoneuria is shown to be paraphyletic and the genus Notonurus is reinstalled for African and Malagasy species previously placed in Compsoneuria. A molecular clock excluded a Gondwanan vicariance origin and instead favoured a more recent overseas colonization of Madagascar. The observed monophyly and high microendemism highlight their conservation importance and suggest the DNA-based approach can rapidly provide information on the diversity, endemism, and origin of freshwater biodiversity. Our results underline the important role that museum collections can play in molecular studies, especially in critically endangered biodiversity hotspots like Madagascar where entire species or populations may go extinct very quickly.
马达加斯加的生物多样性和特有性是世界上最非凡和最濒危的生物多样性之一。这包括该岛的淡水生物多样性,尽管人们对淡水无脊椎动物的多样性、特有性和生物地理起源知之甚少。蜉蝣目(Ephemeroptera)的水生幼体被广泛用作生物指标,是马达加斯加淡水生物多样性的重要组成部分。许多物种被认为是微特有种,仅限于森林地区的单一河流流域,因此它们对栖息地减少和退化特别敏感。Heptageniidae 是蜉蝣目一个具有全球多样性的科(>500 种),但除了 1996 年描述的两个物种外,在马达加斯加几乎不为人知。了解其多样性、特有性和起源的标准方法需要在几个大陆进行广泛的实地采样,并进行多年的分类学工作,然后进行系统发育分析。在这里,我们使用博物馆收藏和新采集的个体,结合 DNA 分类学和系统发育学的方法来规避这一问题。基于聚合法的 GMYC 分析表明,马达加斯加有 14 种可能的物种,其中 70%是微特有种。包括非洲和亚洲物种以及两个线粒体和四个核基因座的数据的系统发育分析表明,马达加斯加的 Heptageniidae 是单系的,与非洲物种是姐妹群。Compsoneuria 属被证明是并系的,Notonurus 属被重新安置为以前置于 Compsoneuria 属中的非洲和马达加斯加物种。分子钟排除了冈瓦纳大陆的隔离起源,而支持马达加斯加最近的海外殖民化。观察到的单系性和高特有性突出了它们的保护重要性,并表明基于 DNA 的方法可以快速提供有关淡水生物多样性的多样性、特有性和起源的信息。我们的研究结果强调了博物馆收藏在分子研究中的重要作用,特别是在像马达加斯加这样的生物多样性热点地区,那里的整个物种或种群可能很快就会灭绝。