Natural History Museum and Institute, Chiba, Chiba, Japan.
PLoS One. 2013 Sep 4;8(9):e73535. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0073535. eCollection 2013.
Uncertainties surrounding the evolutionary origin of the epipelagic fish family Scombridae (tunas and mackerels) are symptomatic of the difficulties in resolving suprafamilial relationships within Percomorpha, a hyperdiverse teleost radiation that contains approximately 17,000 species placed in 13 ill-defined orders and 269 families. Here we find that scombrids share a common ancestry with 14 families based on (i) bioinformatic analyses using partial mitochondrial and nuclear gene sequences from all percomorphs deposited in GenBank (10,733 sequences) and (ii) subsequent mitogenomic analysis based on 57 species from those targeted 15 families and 67 outgroup taxa. Morphological heterogeneity among these 15 families is so extraordinary that they have been placed in six different perciform suborders. However, members of the 15 families are either coastal or oceanic pelagic in their ecology with diverse modes of life, suggesting that they represent a previously undetected adaptive radiation in the pelagic realm. Time-calibrated phylogenies imply that scombrids originated from a deep-ocean ancestor and began to radiate after the end-Cretaceous when large predatory epipelagic fishes were selective victims of the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction. We name this clade of open-ocean fishes containing Scombridae "Pelagia" in reference to the common habitat preference that links the 15 families.
关于上层鱼类金枪鱼和鲭鱼科(Scombridae)的进化起源存在不确定性,这表明在解决硬骨鱼超目(Percomorpha)内的超科关系方面存在困难。硬骨鱼超目是一个高度多样化的硬骨鱼类辐射群,包含大约 17000 种物种,分为 13 个定义不明确的目和 269 个科。在这里,我们发现金枪鱼科与 14 个科具有共同的祖先,这是基于以下两点:(i)使用从 GenBank 中存储的所有硬骨鱼类的部分线粒体和核基因序列进行生物信息学分析(10733 个序列);(ii)随后基于从 15 个目标科和 67 个外群类群中选择的 57 个物种进行线粒体基因组分析。这 15 个科之间的形态异质性非常显著,以至于它们被归入了六个不同的鲈形亚目。然而,这些科的成员在生态上要么是沿海或远洋上层洄游鱼类,生活方式多样,这表明它们代表了以前在远洋领域未被发现的适应性辐射。时间校准的系统发育树表明,金枪鱼科起源于深海祖先,在白垩纪末期大的上层掠食性鱼类成为白垩纪-古近纪灭绝事件的选择性受害者后开始辐射。我们将这个包含金枪鱼科的远洋鱼类分支命名为“Pelagia”,以表示将这 15 个科联系在一起的共同栖息地偏好。