EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY OF THE PARROTFISHES: BIOGEOGRAPHY, ECOMORPHOLOGY, AND COMPARATIVE DIVERSITY
Open Access
- 1 May 2002
- Vol. 56 (5) , 961-971
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb01408.x
Abstract
The family Scaridae comprises about 90 species of herbivorous coral reef, rock reef, and seagrass fishes. Parrotfishes are important agents of marine bioerosion who rework the substrate with their beaklike oral jaws. Many scarid populations are characterized by complex social systems including highly differentiated sexual stages, territoriality, and the defense of harems. Here, we test a hypothesis of relationships among parrotfish genera derived from nearly 2 kb of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA sequence. The DNA tree is different than a phylogeny based on comparative morphology and leads to important reinterpretations of scarid evolution. The molecular data suggest a split among seagrass and coral reef associated genera with nearly 80% of all species in the coral reef clade. Our phylogenetic results imply an East Tethyan origin of the family and the recurrent evolution of excavating and scraping feeding modes. It is likely that ecomorphological differences played a significant role in the initial divergence of major scarid lineages, but that variation in color and breeding behavior has triggered subsequent diversification. We present a two-phase model of parrotfish evolution to explain patterns of comparative diversity. Finally, we discuss the application of this model to other adaptively radiating clades.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Molecular Systematics, Zoogeography, and Evolutionary Ecology of the Atlantic Parrotfish Genus SparisomaMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2000
- Reconstructing labroid evolution with single–copy nuclear DNAProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1997
- Quartet Puzzling: A Quartet Maximum-Likelihood Method for Reconstructing Tree TopologiesMolecular Biology and Evolution, 1996
- Carbonate transport and within-reef patterns of bioerosion and sediment release by parrotfishes (family Scaridae) on the Great Barrier ReefMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1995
- Molecular Systematics and Radiation of the Haplochromine Cichlids (Teleostei: Perciformes) of Lake MalawiIchthyology & Herpetology, 1994
- Foraging by the stoplight parrotfish Sparisoma viride II. Intake and assimilation of food, protein and energyMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1994
- Foraging by the stoplight parrotfish Sparisoma viride. I. Food selection in different, socially determined habitatsMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1994
- Sex change and the size-advantage modelTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 1988
- Social Control of Sex Reversal in a Coral-Reef FishScience, 1972
- The Evolution of Hermaphroditism Among AnimalsThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1969