Mitochondrial genomics of gadine fishes: implications for taxonomy and biogeographic origins from whole-genome data sets
- 1 September 2006
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Genome
- Vol. 49 (9) , 1115-1130
- https://doi.org/10.1139/g06-083
Abstract
Phylogenetic analysis of 13 substantially complete mitochondrial DNA genome sequences (14 036 bp) from 10 taxa of gadine codfishes and pollock provides highly corroborated resolution of outstanding questions on their biogeographic evolution. Of 6 resolvable nodes among species, 4 were supported by >95% of bootstrap replications in parsimony, distance, likelihood, and similarly high posterior probabilities in bayesian analyses, one by 85%–95% according to the method of analysis, and one by 99% by one method and a majority of the other two. The endemic Pacific species, walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma), is more closely related to the endemic Atlantic species, Atlantic cod (Gadus macrocephalus), than either is to a second Pacific endemic, Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus). The walleye pollock should thus be referred to the genus Gadus as originally described (Gadus chalcogrammus Pallas 1811). Arcto-Atlantic Greenland cod, previously regarded as a distinct species (G. ogac), are a genomically distinguishable subspecies within pan-Pacific G. macrocephalus. Of the 2 endemic Arctic Ocean genera, Polar cod (Boreogadus) as the outgroup to Arctic cod (Arctogadus) and Gadus sensu lato is more strongly supported than a pairing of Boreogadus and Arctogadus as sister taxa. Taking into consideration historical patterns of hydrogeography, we outline a hypothesis of the origin of the 2 endemic Pacific species as independent but simultaneous invasions through the Bering Strait from an Arcto-Atlantic ancestral lineage. In contrast to the genome data, the complete proteome sequence (3830 amino acids) resolved only 3 nodes with >95% confidence, and placed Alaska pollock outside the Gadus clade owing to reversal mutations in the ND5 locus that restore ancestral, non-Gadus, amino acid residues in that species.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- The occurrence of Theragra finnmarchicaKoefoed, 1956(Teleostei, Gadidae), 1932–2004Journal of Fish Biology, 2005
- Molecular Phylogenetics of Gadidae and Related Gadiformes Based on Mitochondrial DNA SequencesMarine Biotechnology, 2005
- A phylogeny of the extant Phocidae inferred from complete mitochondrial DNA coding regionsMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2004
- Mitochondrial Cytochrome b DNA Variation in the High-Fecundity Atlantic Cod: Trans-Atlantic Clines and Shallow Gene GenealogyGenetics, 2004
- A refined age for the earliest opening of Bering StraitPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 2002
- Molecular systematics of gadid fishes: implications for the biogeographic origins of Pacific speciesCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1999
- Evolution of Atlantic and Pacific Cod: Loss of Genetic Variation and Gene Expression in Pacific CodEvolution, 1988
- Allozyme evidence for reproductively isolated sympatric populations of brown trout Salmo trutta L. in Lough Melvin, IrelandJournal of Fish Biology, 1981
- Biochemical Genetic Variation in Walleye Pollock, Theragra chalcogramma: Population Structure in the Southeastern Bering Sea and the Gulf of AlaskaCanadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 1980
- Formal Definitions of Paraphyly and PolyphylySystematic Zoology, 1974