@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20836,
author = {Jakob Damgaard and Filippo Maria Buzzetti and Silvia A Mazzucconi and Tom A Weir and Herbert Zettel},
title = {A molecular phylogeny of the pan-tropical pond skater genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 (Hemiptera?Heteroptera: Gerromorpha-Gerridae).},
year = {2010},
keywords = {Waterstriders; Systematics; Taxonomy; Biogeography; Island; endemics},
doi = {10.1016/j.ympev.2010.07.020},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution},
volume = {57},
number = {},
pages = {669--677},
abstract = {We investigated phylogenetic relationships among pond skaters (Heteroptera: Gerridae) of the genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 by performing separate and combined parsimony analyses of DNA sequences from three mitochondrial (COI + II, 16SrRNA) and one nuclear (28SrRNA) gene(s). The taxon sample represented almost two thirds of the known diversity, and with most taxa represented by two or more individuals. A simultaneous analysis of all data showed that L. luctuosus Montrousier 1865 was paraphyletic and suggests that ??L. luctuosus? from Australia and possibly also a population from the Society Islands (Moorea) each represents unrecognized species. L. fossarum F. 1775 was strongly supported, but the two subspecies L. f. fossarum F. 1775 and L. f. gilguy Andersen and Weir 1997 were paraphyletic. The two currently recognized subgenera Limnogonus (s. str.) St?l 1868 and L. (Limnogonoides) Andersen 1975 were paraphyletic, and were accordingly broken up in several monophyletic groups, each containing one or more species. From Limnogonus (s. str.) we delimited five clades: I (comprising L. aduncus Drake & Harris 1933, L. recens Drake and Harris 1934, L. profugus Drake & Harris 1930 and L. ignotus Drake and Harris 1934, all from the Neotropical Region), II (comprising L. nitidus Mayr 1865 from the Oriental Region), III (comprising L. franciscanus (St?l 1859) from the New World and L. cereiventris (Signoret 1862) from the Afrotropical Region), IV (comprising L. hungerfordi Andersen 1975 and L. luctuosus Montrousier 1865 from the Oriental and Australasian Regions) and V (comprising L. fossarum F. 1775 from the Oriental and Australasian Regions). From L. (Limnogonoides) we delimited two clades: VI (comprising L. intermedius Poisson 1941 from the Afrotropical Region and L. pectoralis (Mayr 1865) from the Oriental Region) and VII (comprising L. hypoleucus (Gerstaecker 1873), L. nigrescens Poisson 1941, L. poissoni Andersen 1975, and L. capensis China 1925 from the Afrotropical Region). Finally, L. (s. str.) windi Hungerford & Matsuda 1961 from Australia was placed as sister to clades I?VI. A manual optimization of geographical distribution onto the strict consensus tree suggests that Limnogonus is primarily an Old World group with independent transitions to the New World in L. franciscanus and in the common ancestor of Clade I.}
}
Citation for Study 12871
Citation title:
"A molecular phylogeny of the pan-tropical pond skater genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 (Hemiptera?Heteroptera: Gerromorpha-Gerridae).".
Study name:
"A molecular phylogeny of the pan-tropical pond skater genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 (Hemiptera?Heteroptera: Gerromorpha-Gerridae).".
This study is part of submission 12871
(Status: Published).
Citation
Damgaard J., Buzzetti F.M., Mazzucconi S.A., Weir T.A., & Zettel H. 2010. A molecular phylogeny of the pan-tropical pond skater genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 (Hemiptera?Heteroptera: Gerromorpha-Gerridae). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 57: 669-677.
Authors
-
Damgaard J.
(submitter)
++4544949166
-
Buzzetti F.M.
-
Mazzucconi S.A.
-
Weir T.A.
-
Zettel H.
Abstract
We investigated phylogenetic relationships among pond skaters (Heteroptera: Gerridae) of the genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 by performing separate and combined parsimony analyses of DNA sequences from three mitochondrial (COI + II, 16SrRNA) and one nuclear (28SrRNA) gene(s). The taxon sample represented almost two thirds of the known diversity, and with most taxa represented by two or more individuals. A simultaneous analysis of all data showed that L. luctuosus Montrousier 1865 was paraphyletic and suggests that ??L. luctuosus? from Australia and possibly also a population from the Society Islands (Moorea) each represents unrecognized species. L. fossarum F. 1775 was strongly supported, but the two subspecies L. f. fossarum F. 1775 and L. f. gilguy Andersen and Weir 1997 were paraphyletic. The two currently recognized subgenera Limnogonus (s. str.) St?l 1868 and L. (Limnogonoides) Andersen 1975 were paraphyletic, and were accordingly broken up in several monophyletic groups, each containing one or more species. From Limnogonus (s. str.) we delimited five clades: I (comprising L. aduncus Drake & Harris 1933, L. recens Drake and Harris 1934, L. profugus Drake & Harris 1930 and L. ignotus Drake and Harris 1934, all from the Neotropical Region), II (comprising L. nitidus Mayr 1865 from the Oriental Region), III (comprising L. franciscanus (St?l 1859) from the New World and L. cereiventris (Signoret 1862) from the Afrotropical Region), IV (comprising L. hungerfordi Andersen 1975 and L. luctuosus Montrousier 1865 from the Oriental and Australasian Regions) and V (comprising L. fossarum F. 1775 from the Oriental and Australasian Regions). From L. (Limnogonoides) we delimited two clades: VI (comprising L. intermedius Poisson 1941 from the Afrotropical Region and L. pectoralis (Mayr 1865) from the Oriental Region) and VII (comprising L. hypoleucus (Gerstaecker 1873), L. nigrescens Poisson 1941, L. poissoni Andersen 1975, and L. capensis China 1925 from the Afrotropical Region). Finally, L. (s. str.) windi Hungerford & Matsuda 1961 from Australia was placed as sister to clades I?VI. A manual optimization of geographical distribution onto the strict consensus tree suggests that Limnogonus is primarily an Old World group with independent transitions to the New World in L. franciscanus and in the common ancestor of Clade I.
Keywords
Waterstriders; Systematics; Taxonomy; Biogeography; Island; endemics
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S12871
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref20836,
author = {Jakob Damgaard and Filippo Maria Buzzetti and Silvia A Mazzucconi and Tom A Weir and Herbert Zettel},
title = {A molecular phylogeny of the pan-tropical pond skater genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 (Hemiptera?Heteroptera: Gerromorpha-Gerridae).},
year = {2010},
keywords = {Waterstriders; Systematics; Taxonomy; Biogeography; Island; endemics},
doi = {10.1016/j.ympev.2010.07.020},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution},
volume = {57},
number = {},
pages = {669--677},
abstract = {We investigated phylogenetic relationships among pond skaters (Heteroptera: Gerridae) of the genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 by performing separate and combined parsimony analyses of DNA sequences from three mitochondrial (COI + II, 16SrRNA) and one nuclear (28SrRNA) gene(s). The taxon sample represented almost two thirds of the known diversity, and with most taxa represented by two or more individuals. A simultaneous analysis of all data showed that L. luctuosus Montrousier 1865 was paraphyletic and suggests that ??L. luctuosus? from Australia and possibly also a population from the Society Islands (Moorea) each represents unrecognized species. L. fossarum F. 1775 was strongly supported, but the two subspecies L. f. fossarum F. 1775 and L. f. gilguy Andersen and Weir 1997 were paraphyletic. The two currently recognized subgenera Limnogonus (s. str.) St?l 1868 and L. (Limnogonoides) Andersen 1975 were paraphyletic, and were accordingly broken up in several monophyletic groups, each containing one or more species. From Limnogonus (s. str.) we delimited five clades: I (comprising L. aduncus Drake & Harris 1933, L. recens Drake and Harris 1934, L. profugus Drake & Harris 1930 and L. ignotus Drake and Harris 1934, all from the Neotropical Region), II (comprising L. nitidus Mayr 1865 from the Oriental Region), III (comprising L. franciscanus (St?l 1859) from the New World and L. cereiventris (Signoret 1862) from the Afrotropical Region), IV (comprising L. hungerfordi Andersen 1975 and L. luctuosus Montrousier 1865 from the Oriental and Australasian Regions) and V (comprising L. fossarum F. 1775 from the Oriental and Australasian Regions). From L. (Limnogonoides) we delimited two clades: VI (comprising L. intermedius Poisson 1941 from the Afrotropical Region and L. pectoralis (Mayr 1865) from the Oriental Region) and VII (comprising L. hypoleucus (Gerstaecker 1873), L. nigrescens Poisson 1941, L. poissoni Andersen 1975, and L. capensis China 1925 from the Afrotropical Region). Finally, L. (s. str.) windi Hungerford & Matsuda 1961 from Australia was placed as sister to clades I?VI. A manual optimization of geographical distribution onto the strict consensus tree suggests that Limnogonus is primarily an Old World group with independent transitions to the New World in L. franciscanus and in the common ancestor of Clade I.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 20836
AU - Damgaard,Jakob
AU - Buzzetti,Filippo Maria
AU - Mazzucconi,Silvia A
AU - Weir,Tom A
AU - Zettel,Herbert
T1 - A molecular phylogeny of the pan-tropical pond skater genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 (Hemiptera?Heteroptera: Gerromorpha-Gerridae).
PY - 2010
KW - Waterstriders; Systematics; Taxonomy; Biogeography; Island; endemics
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2010.07.020
N2 - We investigated phylogenetic relationships among pond skaters (Heteroptera: Gerridae) of the genus Limnogonus St?l 1868 by performing separate and combined parsimony analyses of DNA sequences from three mitochondrial (COI + II, 16SrRNA) and one nuclear (28SrRNA) gene(s). The taxon sample represented almost two thirds of the known diversity, and with most taxa represented by two or more individuals. A simultaneous analysis of all data showed that L. luctuosus Montrousier 1865 was paraphyletic and suggests that ??L. luctuosus? from Australia and possibly also a population from the Society Islands (Moorea) each represents unrecognized species. L. fossarum F. 1775 was strongly supported, but the two subspecies L. f. fossarum F. 1775 and L. f. gilguy Andersen and Weir 1997 were paraphyletic. The two currently recognized subgenera Limnogonus (s. str.) St?l 1868 and L. (Limnogonoides) Andersen 1975 were paraphyletic, and were accordingly broken up in several monophyletic groups, each containing one or more species. From Limnogonus (s. str.) we delimited five clades: I (comprising L. aduncus Drake & Harris 1933, L. recens Drake and Harris 1934, L. profugus Drake & Harris 1930 and L. ignotus Drake and Harris 1934, all from the Neotropical Region), II (comprising L. nitidus Mayr 1865 from the Oriental Region), III (comprising L. franciscanus (St?l 1859) from the New World and L. cereiventris (Signoret 1862) from the Afrotropical Region), IV (comprising L. hungerfordi Andersen 1975 and L. luctuosus Montrousier 1865 from the Oriental and Australasian Regions) and V (comprising L. fossarum F. 1775 from the Oriental and Australasian Regions). From L. (Limnogonoides) we delimited two clades: VI (comprising L. intermedius Poisson 1941 from the Afrotropical Region and L. pectoralis (Mayr 1865) from the Oriental Region) and VII (comprising L. hypoleucus (Gerstaecker 1873), L. nigrescens Poisson 1941, L. poissoni Andersen 1975, and L. capensis China 1925 from the Afrotropical Region). Finally, L. (s. str.) windi Hungerford & Matsuda 1961 from Australia was placed as sister to clades I?VI. A manual optimization of geographical distribution onto the strict consensus tree suggests that Limnogonus is primarily an Old World group with independent transitions to the New World in L. franciscanus and in the common ancestor of Clade I.
L3 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2010.07.020
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
VL - 57
IS -
SP - 669
EP - 677
ER -