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Lessons from parasitic flatworms about evolution and historical biogeography of their vertebrate hosts
Authors:Olivier Verneau  Louis Du Preez  Mathieu Badets
Institution:1. UMR 5244 CNRS-EPHE-UPVD, Biologie et écologie tropicale et Méditerranéenne, Parasitologie fonctionnelle et évolutive, Université Via Domitia, 52, avenue Paul-Alduy, 66860 Perpignan cedex, France;2. School of Environmental Sciences and Development, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, Private Bag X6001, Potchefstroom 2520, South Africa
Abstract:Cophylogenetic studies investigate the evolutionary trends within host-parasite associations. Examination of the different levels of fidelity between host and parasite phylogenies provides a powerful tool to inspect patterns and processes of parasite diversification over host evolution and geological times. Within the phylum Platyhelminthes, the monogeneans are mainly fish parasites. The Polystomatidae, however, are known from the sarcopterygian Australian lungfish and tetrapods such as amphibians, freshwater turtles, and the African hippopotamus. Cophylogenetic and biogeographic vicariance analyses, supplemented by molecular calibrations, showed that the Polystomatidae may track the evolutionary history of the first aquatic tetrapods in the Palaeozoic age. Evolutionary lines of the major polystome lineages would also be intimately related to the evolution of their hosts over hundreds of millions years. Since the Mesozoic, evolution of polystomes would have been shaped mainly by plate tectonics during the break-up of Gondwanaland and subsequent dispersal of ancestral neobatrachian host lineages. Therefore the Polystomatidae could serve as a novel model to improve cophylogenetic tools and to inspect a suite of questions about the evolution of vertebrate hosts. To cite this article: O. Verneau et al., C. R. Biologies 332 (2009).
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