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Biogeography and evolution of South Pacific topshells (Gastropoda, Trochidae) and their trematode parasites

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dc.contributor.author Donald, Kirsten en_NZ
dc.contributor.author Kennedy, Martyn en_NZ
dc.contributor.author Spencer, Hamish en_NZ
dc.date.copyright 2004-11 en_NZ
dc.identifier.citation Donald, K., Kennedy, M., & Spencer, H. (2004, November). Biogeography and evolution of South Pacific topshells (Gastropoda, Trochidae) and their trematode parasites. Presented at the 16th Annual Colloquium of the Spatial Information Research Centre (SIRC 2004: A Spatio-temporal Workshop). en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10523/776
dc.description Only the abstract was published in the proceedings. There is no full text. en_NZ
dc.description.abstract We have used the DNA sequences of Pacific topshells, belonging to the genera Diloma, Melagraphia and Austrocochlea, to ascertain how this group became established over a large area of the Pacific. Phylogenetic analyses of three genes revealed that Pacific topshell species belong to three major clades. The first two clades, including the most basal clade, consisted solely of Australian Austrocochlea species. The third clade contained the remainder of the Pacific species, representing all three genera, collected from sites in Australia, New Zealand, Chile, Samoa and Japan. Studying these molecular phylogenies, in conjunction with information available on the fossil record of this group and their life history, allowed us to explain how their Pacific wide dispersal evolved. Our results suggest that there were initially two dispersal events from Australia: a northeastward dispersal to an area stretching from Samoa to Japan and an eastward dispersal to New Zealand. From New Zealand there were subsequent dispersals to Chile and there is also tentative evidence to suggest a back dispersal from New Zealand to Australia. Owing to the short-lived nature of the topshell larvae, trans-oceanic larval dispersal is unlikely. Dispersal most probably occurred by rafting of adults on a suitable platform such as macroalgae, indeed kelp is the natural habitat of several topshell species. Our molecular phylogenies imply that, rather then being a random, unlikely event, adult rafting in ocean currents has occurred repeatedly throughout the evolutionary history of topshells, and has resulted in their Pacific-wide distribution. We have also employed molecular techniques to gain understanding of the biogeography and evolution of the parasites, which have been found to infect six Australasian topshell species. Phylogenetic relationships amongst these parasites were inferred based upon two gene sequences. Our molecular phylogeny separated the single parasitic morphotype into three clearly defined clades (which are almost certainly separate biological species): (i) those infecting two species of Austrocochlea from Tasmania, (ii) those infecting Diloma subrostrata in Otago and Southland, New Zealand and (iii) those infecting all the parasitised New Zealand topshells (Melagraphia aethiops, D. subrostrata, Diloma nigerrima and Diloma arida) throughout the country. This last group comprised two subclades, one infecting only D. subrostrata and one infecting the other three species. Three D. subrostrata populations were infected by genetically distinct parasites, yet sympatric populations of the other snail species were not necessarily infected. This study is the first to reveal cryptic digenean species in a single population of a molluscan first-intermediate host. Using molecular techniques, in conjunction with more traditional techniques, such as fossil record and morphological analyses, allowed us to gain insight into topshell and trematode evolution and biogeography. en_NZ
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.relation.uri http://www.business.otago.ac.nz/SIRC05/conferences/2004/13_Donald.pdf en_NZ
dc.subject Austrocochlea en_NZ
dc.subject Diloma en_NZ
dc.subject Melagraphia en_NZ
dc.subject molecular phylogeny en_NZ
dc.subject parasite en_NZ
dc.subject rafting en_NZ
dc.subject topshell en_NZ
dc.subject.lcsh QL Zoology en_NZ
dc.title Biogeography and evolution of South Pacific topshells (Gastropoda, Trochidae) and their trematode parasites en_NZ
dc.type Conference or Workshop Item (Oral presentation) en_NZ
dc.description.version Published en_NZ
otago.date.accession 2005-11-30 en_NZ
otago.relation.pages 55 en_NZ
otago.openaccess Open
dc.identifier.eprints 99 en_NZ
dc.description.refereed Non Peer Reviewed en_NZ
otago.school.eprints Allan Wilson Centre for Molecular Ecology & Evolution en_NZ
otago.school.eprints Spatial Information Research Centre en_NZ
otago.school.eprints Zoology en_NZ
otago.event.dates 29-30 November 2004 en_NZ
otago.event.place Dunedin, New Zealand en_NZ
otago.event.type conference en_NZ
otago.event.title 16th Annual Colloquium of the Spatial Information Research Centre (SIRC 2004: A Spatio-temporal Workshop) en_NZ

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