BMC Ecology and Evolution (Apr 2024)

Mitogenomes do not substantially improve phylogenetic resolution in a young non-model adaptive radiation of freshwater gastropods

  • Björn Stelbrink,
  • Thomas von Rintelen,
  • Ristiyanti M. Marwoto,
  • Walter Salzburger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-024-02235-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background Species flocks in ancient lakes, and particularly those arising from adaptive radiation, make up the bulk of overall taxonomic and morphological diversity in these insular ecosystems. For these mostly young species assemblages, classical mitochondrial barcoding markers have so far been key to disentangle interspecific relationships. However, with the rise and further development of next-generation sequencing (NGS) methods and mapping tools, genome-wide data have become an increasingly important source of information even for non-model groups. Results Here, we provide, for the first time, a comprehensive mitogenome dataset of freshwater gastropods endemic to Sulawesi and thus of an ancient lake invertebrate species flock in general. We applied low-coverage whole-genome sequencing for a total of 78 individuals including 27 out of the 28 Tylomelania morphospecies from the Malili lake system as well as selected representatives from Lake Poso and adjacent catchments. Our aim was to assess whether mitogenomes considerably contribute to the phylogenetic resolution within this young species flock. Interestingly, we identified a high number of variable and parsimony-informative sites across the other ‘non-traditional’ mitochondrial loci. However, although the overall support was very high, the topology obtained was largely congruent with previously published single-locus phylogenies. Several clades remained unresolved and a large number of species was recovered polyphyletic, indicative of both rapid diversification and mitochondrial introgression. Conclusions This once again illustrates that, despite the higher number of characters available, mitogenomes behave like a single locus and thus can only make a limited contribution to resolving species boundaries, particularly when introgression events are involved.

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