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Wiley InterScience

Zoologica Scripta

Zoologica Scripta

Volume 36 Issue 6, Pages 587 - 606

Published Online: 3 Sep 2007

Journal compilation © 2010 The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters


Published on behalf of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters and the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
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A molecular phylogeny of heterodont bivalves (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Heterodonta): new analyses of 18S and 28S rRNA genes
John D. Taylor, Suzanne T. Williams, Emily A. Glover & Patricia Dyal
Corresponding author: John Taylor, Department of Zoology, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK. E-mail: j.taylor@nhm.ac.uk
Suzanne T. Williams, Department of Zoology, The Natural History Museum, London SW7 5BD, UK. E-mail: s.williams@nhm.ac.uk
Emily A. Glover, Department of Zoology, The Natural History Museum, London SW7 5BD, UK. E-mail: emily.glover@dial.pipex.com
Patricia Dyal, Department of Zoology, The Natural History Museum, London SW7 5BD, UK. E-mail: p.dyal@nhm.ac.uk

doi:10.1111/j.1463-6409.2007.00299.x

Copyright © 2007 The Natural History Museum

Taylor, J. D., Williams, S. T., Glover, E. A. & Dyal, P. (2007). A molecular phylogeny of heterodont bivalves (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Heterodonta): new analyses of 18S and 28S rRNA genes. — Zoologica Scripta, **, ***–***.

ABSTRACT

A new molecular phylogeny is presented for the highly diverse, bivalve molluscan subclass Heterodonta. The study, the most comprehensive for heterodonts to date, used new sequences of 18S and 28S rRNA genes for 103 species from 49 family groups with species of Palaeoheterodonta (Trigoniidae, Margaritiferidae and Unionidae) as outgroups. Results confirm previous analyses that the Carditidae/Astartidae/Crassatellidae clade is basal to all other heterodonts including Anomalodesmata (often classified as a separate subclass or order). Thyasiroidea occupy a near basal position between the Crassatelloidea and Anomalodesmata. Lucinidae form a well-supported monophyletic group distinct from Thyasiridae and Ungulinidae. The Solenoidea and Hiatelloidea link as sister groups distant from the Tellinoidea and Myoidea, respectively, where they had been previously associated. The position of the Gastrochaenidae is unstable but does not group with myoidean taxa. Species of four families of Galeommatoidea form a clade that also includes Sportellidae of the Cyamioidea. The Cardioidea and Tellinoidea form highly supported, long branched, individual clades but group as sister taxa. A major clade including Veneroidea, Mactroidea, Myoidea and other families is given the unranked name Neoheterodontei. There is no support for a separate order Myoida (Myoidea and Pholadoidea). Dreissenidae group within the clade including Myidae, Corbulidae, Pholadidae and Teredinidae. The Corbiculoidea is confirmed as polyphyletic with the Sphaeriidae and Corbiculidae forming separate clades within the Neoheterodontei; Corbiculidae grouping with the Glauconomidae. Hemidonacidae are unrelated to the Cardiidae, as previously proposed, but nest within the Neoheterodontei. The Gaimardiidae group near to the Ungulinidae and not with Cyamioidea where most recently classified. The family Ungulinidae, previously classified in the Lucinoidea, forms a well-supported clade within the Neoheterodontei and is elevated to superfamily rank — Ungulinoidea. The monophyletic status of Glossoidea, Arcticoidea and Veneroidea is unconfirmed. A brief review of the fossil record of the heterodonts indicates that the basal clades of Crassatelloidea, Anomalodesmata and Lucinoidea diverged very early in the Lower Palaeozoic. Other groups such as the Hiatelloidea, Solenoidea, Gastrochaenidae probably were of late Palaeozoic origins. The Cardioidea and Tellinoidea originated in the Triassic while major groups of Neoheterodontei radiated in the Late Mesozoic. The phylogenetic position of the Thyasiroidea and Galeommatoidea suggests a longer fossil history than has so far been recognized.


Submitted: 12 April 2007 Accepted: 31 July 2007

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1463-6409.2007.00299.x About DOI

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