The tempo and mode of barnacle evolution

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Marcos Pérez-Losada
  • Margaret Harp
  • Høeg, Jens Thorvald
  • Yair Achituv
  • Diana Jones
  • Hiromi Watanabe
  • Keith A Crandall
Previous phylogenetic attempts at resolving barnacle evolutionary relationships are few and have relied on limited taxon sampling. Here we combine DNA sequences from three nuclear genes (18S, 28S and H3) and 44 morphological characters collected from 76 thoracican (ingroup) and 15 rhizocephalan (outgroup) species representing almost all the Thoracica families to assess the tempo and mode of barnacle evolution. Using phylogenetic methods of maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian inference and 14 fossil calibrations, we found that: (1) Iblomorpha form a monophyletic group; (2) pedunculated barnacles without shell plates (Heteralepadomorpha) are not ancestral, but have evolved, at least twice, from plated forms; (3) the ontogenetic pattern with 5-->6-->8-->12+ plates does not reflect Thoracica shell evolution; (4) the traditional asymmetric barnacles (Verrucidae) and the Balanomorpha are each monophyletic and together they form a monophyletic group; (5) asymmetry and loss of a peduncle have evolved twice in the Thoracica, resulting in neither the Verrucomorpha nor the Sessilia forming monophyletic groups in their present definitions; (6) the Scalpellomorpha are not monophyletic; (7) the Thoracica suborders evolved since the Early Carboniferous (340mya) with the final radiation of the Sessilia in the Upper Jurassic (147mya). These results, therefore, reject many of the underlying hypotheses about character evolution in the Cirripedia Thoracica, stimulate a variety of new thoughts on thoracican radiation, and suggest the need for a major rearrangement in thoracican classification based on estimated phylogenetic relationships.
Original languageEnglish
JournalMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
Volume46
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)328-46
Number of pages18
ISSN1055-7903
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008

Bibliographical note

Keywords: Animals; Cell Nucleus; Evolution; Phylogeny; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Thoracica

ID: 10453379