The evolution and population genetics of hydrothermal vent megafauna from the Scotia Sea

This project used a variety of genetic markers to investigate the evolution and population genetics of hydrothermal vent fauna that were recovered from the Scotia Sea, in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. The origins of one of these species, an undescribed species of Kiwa sp. found on the E...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roterman, CN
Other Authors: Rogers, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:8a84f6c4-e067-4c7c-bc9e-34e59c8e6ef3
Description
Summary:This project used a variety of genetic markers to investigate the evolution and population genetics of hydrothermal vent fauna that were recovered from the Scotia Sea, in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. The origins of one of these species, an undescribed species of Kiwa sp. found on the East Scotia Ridge (ESR) and its constituent family Kiwaidae, a group of vent and seep-associated decapod squat lobsters (infraorder Anomura) was investigated using a concatenated nine-gene dataset and key divergences were dated using fossil calibrations. These results confirm earlier research showing Kiwaidae reside in the superfamily Chirostyloidea, but form a monophyletic clade with the non-chemosynthetic family Chirostylidae and not Eumunididae. Chirostyloid families diverged in the Cretaceous, although extant Kiwaidae radiated in the Eocene, consistent with many other chemosynthetic taxa that appear recently derived. The basal tree position of Pacific species (and the Alaska location of a likely stem-lineage kiwaid fossil) suggests kiwaids originated in the East Pacific. Within a Southern Hemisphere clade, the divergence between the southeastern Pacific K. hirsuta and a non-Pacific lineage (Kiwa sp. ESR and Southwest Indian Ridge kiwaids) is no earlier than 25.9 Ma, consistent with a spread from the Pacific into the Scotia Sea and beyond via now-extinct active ridge connections or mediated by a Miocene onset of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) through a newly-opened Drake Passage. This project also investigated the population genetics of three undescribed species found at two vent fields ~ 440 km apart at either end of the ESR: Kiwa sp., a peltospirid gastropod and Lepetodrilus sp. limpets. Lepetodrilus sp. was also found at the Kemp Caldera, a submerged part of the South Sandwich Islands (SSI). Analyses of cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (COI) as well as microsatellite loci developed from Roche 454 sequence libraries revealed no differentiation along the ESR for all three species consistent with panmixia, or ...