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Hidden species diversity in an iconic living fossil vertebrate

Chase Doran Brownstein, Daemin Kim, Oliver D. Orr, Gabriela M. Hogue, Bryn H. Tracy, M. Worth Pugh, Randal Singer, Chelsea Myles-McBurney, Jon Michael Mollish, Jeffrey W. Simmons, Solomon R. David, Gregory J. Watkins‐Colwell, Eva A. Hoffman, Thomas J. Near

2022Biology Letters23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ancient, species-poor lineages persistently occur across the Tree of life. These lineages are likely to contain unrecognized species diversity masked by the low rates of morphological evolution that characterize living fossils. Halecomorphi is a lineage of ray-finned fishes that diverged from its closest relatives before 200 Ma and is represented by only one living species in eastern North America, the bowfin, Amia calva Linnaeus. Here, we use double digest restriction-site-associated DNA sequencing and morphology to illuminate recent speciation in bowfins. Our results support the delimitation of a second living species of Amia , with the timing of diversification dating to the Plio-Pleistocene. This delimitation expands the species diversity of an ancient lineage that is integral to studies of vertebrate genomics and development, yet is facing growing conservation threats driven by the caviar fishery.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyVertebrateLineage (genetic)Living fossilEvolutionary biologyEcologyPhylogeneticsBiodiversityZoologyGeneBiochemistryFish biology, ecology, and behaviorIchthyology and Marine BiologyIdentification and Quantification in Food
Hidden species diversity in an iconic living fossil vertebrate | Litcius