Advanced search
Start date
Betweenand


Biodiversity and molecular phylogeny of Phreatobiidae (Ostariophysi, Siluriformes) - with a proposal about its phylogenetic placement within Siluriforme and a discussion on the evolution of the subterranean habit

Full text
Author(s):
Janice Muriel Fernandes Lima da Cunha
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Biociências (IBIOC/SB)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Mario Cesar Cardoso de Pinna; Heraldo Antonio Britski; Claudio de Oliveira; Camila Cherem Ribas; Lurdes Foresti de Almeida Toledo
Advisor: Mario Cesar Cardoso de Pinna
Abstract

Samples from different species of Phreatobius were collected in order to obtain molecular data from nuclear RAG-2 gene sequence potentially informative to resolve phylogenetic relationships of the genus. The data on Phreatobiidae were combined with equivalent sequence information from representatives of several other siluriform families, and analyzed by maximum parsimony (a total of 966 bp RAG-2 for 176 taxa). The analyses resulted in 172 trees, with 5213 steps. The strict consensus results strongly indicate that Phreatobius forms a monophyletic group (supported by 33 molecular synapomorphies) with Pseudopimelodidae, Pimelodidae, and Conorhynchos + Heptapteridae. Previous hypotheses aligning Phreatobius exclusively with Heptapteridae were not supported. Results herein presented requires that Phreatobius be allocated in its own family, as Phreatobiidae (already available at subfamilial level). A taxonomic revision of Phreatobiidae shows that at least seven species exist, only three of which currently described: Phreatobius cisternarum, Phreatobius dracunculus, Phreatobius sanguijuela, Phreatobius sp. "Anapixi", Phreatobius sp. "Jaú", Phreatobius sp. Tarumanzinho", Phreatobius sp. "Viruá". A hypothesis of relationships within Phreatobiidae shows that P. cisternarum is sister-group of a clade composed of (P. sp. "Viruá" (P. dracunculus + P. sp. "Tarumanzinho")). Phylogenetic mapping shows that subterranean habit has evolved once in the family and the phreatic environment was invaded twice. (AU)