학술논문

Molecular phylogenetic analysis of the squid family Mastigoteuthidae (Mollusca, Cephalopoda) based on three mitochondrial genes
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Hydrobiologia. March 1, 2014, Vol. 725 Issue 1, p145, 20 p.
Subject
Genetic research
Cytochrome oxidase
Genes
Cladistic analysis
Bar codes
RNA
Mitochondrial DNA
Language
English
ISSN
0018-8158
Abstract
Mastigoteuthid squids are ecologically important, being prey to many apex predators, yet the diversity and systematics of the family remain poorly understood. Delicate by nature, they are often damaged during capture; there is a need to accurately identify incomplete mastigoteuthid specimens from collections and stomach contents. This study aimed to test a morphological hypothesis for the division of the genera Mastigoteuthis (Mt.), Idioteuthis, Mastigopsis (Mp.), Echinoteuthis, and Magnoteuthis (Mg.) and to assess the utility of DNA barcodes to discriminate species. Three mitochondrial genes (16S rRNA, 12S rRNA, and cytochrome c oxidase subunit I) were analysed for eight different species, representing the largest phylogenetic assessment of the family to date. Evidence was found for a potentially new species in New Zealand that has been previously misidentified as the morphologically similar species Mg. magna. Each species analysed herein exhibited unique mitochondrial DNA haplotypes for all loci, and the morphological distinction between the five proposed genera was strongly supported using a combined Bayesian and maximum-likelihood phylogenies. Of the three loci examined, the DNA barcode region shows the greatest divergence between species and should be used in future systematic work on the Mastigoteuthidae. Keywords Mastigoteuthidae * DNA barcode * Cephalopod * Phylogeny * Integrative taxonomy
Introduction The Mastigoteuthidae, commonly known as whip-lash squid, is a meso- and bathy-pelagic oegopsid squid family whose taxonomy is the subject of considerable controversy (Nesis, 1987). While found in most [...]