WoRMS source details
Gonzalez, Brett C.; Petersen, Haidi Cecilie B.; Di Domenico, Maikon; Martínez, Alejandro; Armenteros, Maickel; García-Machado, Erik; Møller, Peter Rask; Worsaae, Katrine. (2017). Phylogeny and biogeography of the scaleless scale worm Pisione (Sigalionidae, Annelida). Ecology and Evolution. 1-22 [online before print, 22 March 2017].
275343
10.1002/ece3.2853 [view]
Gonzalez, Brett C.; Petersen, Haidi Cecilie B.; Di Domenico, Maikon; Martínez, Alejandro; Armenteros, Maickel; García-Machado, Erik; Møller, Peter Rask; Worsaae, Katrine
2017
Phylogeny and biogeography of the scaleless scale worm Pisione (Sigalionidae, Annelida)
Ecology and Evolution
1-22 [online before print, 22 March 2017]
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb), online 22 March 2017, open access
Pisione is a scaleless group of small scale worms inhabiting sandy bottoms in shallow marine waters. This group was once considered rare, but now 45 described species can be characterized, among others, by their paired, segmental copulatory organs (one to multiple external pairs), which display a complexity of various accessory structures. The evolutionary significance of these unique organs was suggested in the late 1960s, but has been heavily debated since the late 1990s and remains controversial. In the present paper, we study the internal relationships within Pisione, employing combined phylogenetic analyses of both molecular and morphological data from 16 terminals of Pisione, as well as two terminals of Pisionidens, and eight additional scale worms as outgroups. Our taxon sampling covers all geographical areas where the genus has been reported, as well as most of their morphological and copulatory variability, including representatives of the “africana,” “remota,” “crassa,” and “papuensis” groups, established previously by Yamanishi. We hereby provide a first insight into the relationships of the genus, testing previously proposed hypotheses on the evolutionary significance of male copulatory structures within Pisione, while attempting to understand patterns of distribution. The phylogenetic analyses using maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods consistently recovered two large clades spanning the East Atlantic (including the Mediterranean) and the Indo-Pacific–West Atlantic, respectively. Character optimization on our trees revealed a high degree of homoplasy in both non-reproductive and sexual characters of Pisione, with buccal acicula found to be the sole apomorphy among the morphological features assessed herein, with none defining the biogeographical subclades within. Overall, our comparative analyses highlight the high degree of morphological variation in this widely distributed genus, rejecting previous assertions of an increasing number and complexity of copulatory structures across the genus.
Systematics, Taxonomy
Date
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Pisione Grube, 1857 (additional source)
Pisionidae Ehlers, 1901 accepted as Pisioninae Ehlers, 1901 (additional source)
Pisionidae Ehlers, 1901 accepted as Pisioninae Ehlers, 1901 (additional source)
Classification
Subfamily status as Pisioninae. Molecular reports on the position of Pisione and Pisionidae in 2012 and 2017 simply ... [details]