Abstract
Mutational saturation of inspected DNA loci and topological incongruence in the phylogenetic inferences have previously confounded attempts to resolve the evolutionary relationships within the freshwater snail genus Bulinus. Traditionally, the 37 species of Bulinus are placed within the four species groups and the evolutionary divergence between groups is substantial. With an intention to shed new light on species group relationships, the present study was designed to investigate the basal divergences in the phylogeny of Bulinus using highly conserved nuclear genes. The resolved phylogeny inferred that the four species groups of Bulinus were monophyletic and Shimodaira-Hasegawa topology tests found them to be significantly supported. The Bulinus truncatus/tropicus species complex and Bulinus wrighti (Bulinus reticulatus group) formed a well-supported sister-group relationship. The Bulinus africanus species group was the sister-group to the clade (Bulinus truncatus/tropicus + B. wrighti) with the Bulinus forskalii species group as the sister-group to these taxa. The sister-group relationship between Indoplanorbis and Bulinus was non-significant and the basal clade support of Bulinus improved upon exclusion of Indoplanorbis. The finding of basal long branches of Bulinus species originating from Madagascar strongly suggests the presence of additional cryptic species and an evolutionary scenario influenced by this island's geological vicariance from the African mainland. Speciation by polyploidy was inferred to have evolved within a clade in the Bulinus truncatus/tropicus species complex. Although the monophyletic status of each species group was firmly supported, it was difficult to establish species group concepts equally across the variations and place this precisely in a specific temporal framework.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Zoologica Scripta |
Volume | 40 |
Issue number | 2 |
Pages (from-to) | 126-136 |
Number of pages | 11 |
ISSN | 0300-3256 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Mar 2011 |