Muñoz-Ramírez C P, Unmack P J, Habit E, Johnson J B, Cussac V E, Victoriano P
Departamento de Zoología, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Oceanográficas, Universidad de Concepción, Casilla 160-C, Concepción, Chile.
Department of Biology and Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2014 Apr;73:146-60. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2014.01.015. Epub 2014 Jan 31.
The catfish family Diplomystidae is one of the earliest branching lineages within the diverse order Siluriformes and shows a deep phylogenetic split from all other extant and extinct major catfish groups. Despite its relevance in the evolution of siluriforms, phylogenetic relationships within the Diplomystidae are poorly understood, and prior to this study, no phylogenetic hypotheses using molecular data had been published. By conducting a phylogeographic study across the entire distribution of the family, that encompasses river systems from Central-South Chile and Argentina, we provide the first molecular phylogenetic hypothesis among all known species of Diplomystidae, and in addition, investigate how their evolutionary history relates to major historical events that took place in southern South America. Our phylogenetic analyses show four main lineages and nine sub-lineages strongly structured geographically. All Pacific basin populations, with one exception (those found in the Baker basin) clustered within three of the four main lineages (clades I-III), while all populations from Atlantic basins and those from the Baker basin clustered in a single main clade (clade IV). There was a tendency for genetic diversity to decrease from north to south for Pacific basins consistent with an increasing north-south ice coverage during the last glacial maximum. However, we did not find a statistically significant correlation between genetic diversity and latitude. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) showed that river basins and the barrier created by the Andes Mountains explained a high percentage of the genetic variation. Interestingly, most of the genetic variation among drainages was explained among Pacific basins. Molecular phylogenetic analyses agree only partially with current systematics. The geographical distribution of main lineages did not match species distribution and suggests a new taxonomic hypothesis with support for four species of Diplomystes, three species distributed allopatrically from the Rapel to the Valdivia basin, and only one species distributed in Baker and Atlantic basins. High genetic differentiation among river basins suggests that conservation efforts should focus on protecting populations in each basin in order to preserve the genetic diversity of one of the oldest groups of catfishes on the earth today.
双须鲶科是种类繁多的鲶形目最早分化的谱系之一,与所有其他现存和已灭绝的主要鲶鱼群体在系统发育上有很大分歧。尽管它在鲶形目进化中具有重要意义,但双须鲶科内部的系统发育关系却鲜为人知,在本研究之前,尚未有使用分子数据的系统发育假说发表。通过对该科整个分布范围进行系统地理学研究,涵盖智利中南部和阿根廷的河流系统,我们提供了双须鲶科所有已知物种之间的首个分子系统发育假说,此外,还研究了它们的进化历史与南美洲南部发生的重大历史事件之间的关系。我们的系统发育分析显示有四个主要谱系和九个地理上强烈结构化的亚谱系。除了一个例外(在贝克河流域发现的种群),所有太平洋流域的种群都聚集在四个主要谱系中的三个谱系内(分支I - III),而所有来自大西洋流域的种群以及贝克河流域的种群都聚集在一个主要分支(分支IV)中。太平洋流域的遗传多样性有从北向南降低的趋势,这与末次盛冰期南北冰盖增加一致。然而,我们没有发现遗传多样性与纬度之间存在统计学上的显著相关性。分子方差分析(AMOVA)表明,流域和安第斯山脉形成的屏障解释了很大比例的遗传变异。有趣的是,大部分流域间的遗传变异是在太平洋流域之间解释的。分子系统发育分析仅部分与当前的分类学一致。主要谱系的地理分布与物种分布不匹配,并提出了一个新的分类学假说,支持四种双须鲶,其中三种异域分布于从拉佩尔河到瓦尔迪维亚河的流域,只有一种分布在贝克河流域和大西洋流域。流域间的高遗传分化表明,保护工作应侧重于保护每个流域的种群,以保护当今地球上最古老的鲶鱼群体之一的遗传多样性。