Data from: Phylogenetic analysis of the genus Retrotapes del Río, 1997 (Bivalvia: Veneridae) and systematic analysis of its taxa from Chile

Since the genus Retrotapes was erected, some authors have been in favor or against its validity, or argued the assignment of the extant species R. exalbidus and R. lenticularis to Retrotapes. Some authors synonymized Retrotapes with the Miocene genus Frigichione, and others with the extant genus Eur...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alvarez, Maximiliano
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS) 2018
Subjects:
age
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.dv15kp5.1
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.dv15kp5
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.dv15kp5.2
Description
Summary:Since the genus Retrotapes was erected, some authors have been in favor or against its validity, or argued the assignment of the extant species R. exalbidus and R. lenticularis to Retrotapes. Some authors synonymized Retrotapes with the Miocene genus Frigichione, and others with the extant genus Eurhomalea to which most of the species that belong to Retrotapes were previously assigned. In the present contribution, a phylogenetic analysis of the genus is performed to test these controversies. Besides, a systematic revision of the Chilean species of the genus is performed to complete the analysis of the Retrotapes taxa from Patagonia and Antarctica started by previous authors. This study demonstrates that Retrotapes is a monophyletic genus, which is not closely related to Frigichione or Eurhomalea. But instead, it is closely related to some Austral taxa from Kerguelen Island (Paleomarcia), New Zealand (Atamarcia) and Australia (Katelysia), a relationship previously unknown. Besides, the extant species R. lenticularis and R. exalbidus belong to Retrotapes and were recovered as part of a clade closely related to the type species of the genus, R. ninfasiensis (Miocene, Patagonia). Retrotapes is registered in Chile since the late Eocene, where it was represented by R. difficilis nov. comb., a taxon that resembles some Eocene species of the same genus from Antarctica. In the late Oligocene–early Miocene it was represented by R. navidadis and later in the Pliocene by three species, the fossil R. fuenzalidae and the two extant ones. Supplementary Data Set 1List of the reviewed materials.Supplementary Data Set 2List of several taxa used for comparison and performed the phylogenetic analysis.Appendix 1List of characters used to build the matrix.Appendix1_Characters.pdfAppendix 2Matrix used to perform the phylogenetic analysis.Appendix2_Matrix.pdf