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Soft sponges with tricky tree: On the phylogeny of dictyoceratid sponges

Dirk Erpenbeck, Adrian Galitz, Merrick Ekins, Steve de C. Cook, Rob W. M. van Soest, John N. A. Hooper, Gert Wörheide

2020Journal of Zoological Systematics & Evolutionary Research23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Keratose (horny) sponges constitute a very difficult group of Porifera in terms of taxonomy due to their paucity of diagnostic morphological features. (Most) keratose sponges possess no mineral skeletal elements, but an arrangement of organic (spongin) fibers, with little taxonomic or phylogenetic information. Molecular phylogenetics have targeted this evolutionary and biochemically important lineage numerous times, but the conservative nature of popular markers combined with ambiguous identification of the sponge material has so far prevented any robust phylogeny. In the following study, we provide a phylogenetic hypothesis of the keratose order Dictyoceratida based on nuclear markers of higher resolution potential (ITS and 28S C-region), and particularly aim for the inclusion of type specimens as reference material. Our results are compared with previously published data of CO1, 18S, and 28S (D3-D5) data, and indicate the paraphyly of the largest dictyoceratid family, the Thorectidae, due to a sister group relationship of its subfamily Phyllospongiinae with Family Spongiidae. Irciniidae can be recovered as monophyletic. Results on genus level and implications on phylogenetic signals of the most frequently described morphological characters are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyParaphylyPhylogeneticsPhylogenetic treeMonophylySubfamilySister groupEvolutionary biologyZoologyTaxonTaxonomy (biology)CladeBotanyGeneticsGeneMarine Sponges and Natural ProductsGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesCoral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
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