Phylogeny of Salmonine Fishes Based on Growth Hormone Introns: Atlantic (Salmo) and Pacific (Oncorhynchus) Salmon Are Not Sister Taxa |
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Authors: | Todd H Oakley Ruth B Phillips |
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Institution: | Department of Biological Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, PO Box 413, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 53201 |
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Abstract: | Though salmonid fishes are a well-studied group, phylogenetic questions remain, especially with respect to genus-level relationships. These questions were addressed with duplicate growth hormone (GH) introns. Intron sequences from each duplicate gene yielded phylogenetic trees that were not significantly different from each other in topology. Statistical tests supported validity of the controversial monotypic genusParahucho,monophyly ofOncorhynchus,and inclusion ofAcantholingua ohridanawithinSalmo.Suprisingly, GH1 intron C (GH1C) did not support the widely accepted hypothesis thatOncorhynchus(Pacific salmon and trout) andSalmo(Atlantic salmon and trout) are sibling genera; GH2C was ambiguous at this node. Previously published data were also examined for support ofSalmoandOncorhynchusas sister taxa and only morphology showed significant support. If not sister taxa, the independent evolution of anadromy—the migration to sea and return to freshwater for spawning—is most parsimonious. While there was incongruence with and among published data sets, the GH1C intron phylogeny was the best hypothesis, based on currently available molecular data. |
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Keywords: | salmonid phylogeny growth hormone intron Acantholingua Oncorhynchus Parahucho Salmo parametric bootstrapping |
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