Phylogeny, Systematics and Biogeography of the European Sand Gobies (Gobiiformes: Gobionellidae)

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Phylogeny, Systematics and Biogeography of the European Sand Gobies (Gobiiformes: Gobionellidae) See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/330846891 Phylogeny, systematics and biogeography of the European sand gobies (Gobiiformes: Gobionellidae) Article in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society · January 2019 DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zly026 CITATIONS READS 14 391 5 authors, including: Stefano Malavasi Università Ca' Foscari Venezia 116 PUBLICATIONS 1,293 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Goby Research Network View project FRISK - FReshwater fish InvaSions RisK assessment: identifying invasion routes View project All content following this page was uploaded by Christos Gkenas on 20 February 2019. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2019, 185, 212–225. With 3 figures. Phylogeny, systematics and biogeography of the European sand gobies (Gobiiformes: Gobionellidae) 1 2,3 4 CHRISTINE E. THACKER *, CHRISTOS GKENAS , ALEXANDROS TRIANTAFYLLIDIS , Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-abstract/185/1/212/4995525 by guest on 20 February 2019 STEFANO MALAVASI5 AND IOANNIS LEONARDOS3 1Research and Collections, Section of Ichthyology, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, 900 Exposition Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90007, USA 2MARE, Centro de Ciências do Mar e do Ambiente, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, 1749-016 Lisboa, Portugal 3Laboratory of Zoology, Department of Biological Applications and Technology, University of Ioannina, 45110 Ioannina, Greece 4Department of Genetics, Development, and Molecular Biology, School of Biology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 54124 Thessaloniki, Greece 5Department of Environmental Sciences, Informatics, and Statistics, Ca’ Foscari University Venice, via Torino 155-30172 Venice, Italy Received 10 January 2018; revised 6 March 2018; accepted for publication 19 March 2018 The sand gobies are a group of 30 species in five genera (Knipowitschia, Pomatoschistus, Economidichthys, Ninnigobius and Orsinigobius) native to the seas and fresh waters of Europe and the Ponto-Caspian region. We construct a phylogeny incorporating new DNA sequence data (mitochondrial COI gene) for species in Greece and the Adriatic (Venetian Lagoon) with existing sequences sampled from throughout European waters. Our compre- hensive analysis confirms the distinctness of Orsinigobius and Ninnigobius, supports that Gobiusculus is part of Pomatoschistus and supports the monophyly of Economidichthys and Knipowitschia. We then calibrate the phylog- eny using fossils, interpret the phylogenetic biogeography of sand gobies throughout Europe and the Mediterranean and estimate the historical divergence patterns in the group. We infer the origin of the sand goby clade at 33.0 Mya, near the Eocene–Oligocene boundary, and show that radiations among marine Pomatoschistus clades in the Miocene are correlated with the closure of the Tethys seaway. Younger freshwater clades of Ninnigobius, Orsinigobius and subclades of Knipowitschia diversified in the late Miocene and early Pliocene, centred in the Adriatic region and concordant with the Lago Mare phase of the Messinian salinity crisis. Economidichthys is the exception to this pat- tern; it inhabits freshwater but originated and diversified during the mid-Miocene. ADDITIONAL KEYWORDS: DNA barcode, Economidichthys – Europe – Gobiidae – Gobiusculus – Knipowitschia – Lago Mare, Mediterranean – Orsinigobius – Pomatoschistus – Tethys. INTRODUCTION collectively known as sand gobies (Knipowitschia Iljin, 1927; Pomatoschistus Gill, 1863; Economidichthys The seas and freshwaters of Europe host a diverse and Bianco, Bullock, Miller & Roubal, 1987; the genera complex goby fauna, including wide-ranging marine Ninnigobius Whitley, 1951 and Orsinigobius Gandolfi, and euryhaline species in addition to geographically Marconato & Torricelli, 1986 have also been used). restricted freshwater endemics. They are familiar and Together, those genera contain 30 species and are dis- well known, and include several species of conserva- tributed from the coastal Atlantic of western Europe, tion concern (Miller, 1990, 2004; Vanhove et al., 2012). throughout the Mediterranean and many of its associ- Among the European species are a group of five genera ated freshwaters, and into the drainages of the Black, Aral and Caspian seas. Taxonomic and phylogenetic work on the group has been extensive and sometimes *Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] contradictory but has yielded a wealth of data bearing © 2018 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2019, 185, 212–225 212 PHYLOGENY OF EUROPEAN SAND GOBIES 213 on relationships both within sand goby genera and Misetic & Schneider, 1996)] and Ninnigobius [including among sand gobies and their more distant relatives Ninnigobius canestrinii (Ninni,1883) and Ninnigobius (Penzo et al., 1988; Huyse, Van Houdt & Volckaert, montenegrensis (Miller & Šanda, 2008)] are distinct 2004; Larmuseau et al., 2010; Malavasi et al., 2012; from Knipowitschia and Pomatoschistus, respectively Vanhove et al., 2012). (Ahnelt & Bianco, 1990; Huyse et al., 2004; Miller & Sand gobies are well supported as a monophyletic Šanda, 2008; Vanhove et al., 2012; Geiger et al., 2014). group, based on both molecular and morphological There is also agreement across several molecular data [mitochondrial 12S/16S: Penzo et al., 1988; Huyse phylogenetic analyses that Gobiusculus flavescens et al., 2004; Larmuseau et al., 2010 (also rhodopsin); Fabricius, 1779, a common species in coastal marine Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-abstract/185/1/212/4995525 by guest on 20 February 2019 Vanhove et al., 2012; morphology: Economidis & Miller, habitats from the Atlantic coast of Spain north- 1990; Malavasi et al., 2012). The placement of sand ward into Norway, is nested within Pomatoschistus gobies within Gobioidei has been more obscure, but the (Huyse et al., 2004; Larmuseau et al., 2010; Vanhove higher level works of Thacker & Roje (2011), Thacker et al., 2012; Knebelsberger & Thiel, 2014). Within (2011, 2013) and, in particular, Agorreta et al. (2013) Pomatoschistus and Knipowitschia, interrelationships have shown that sand gobies are part of the family of some species have been investigated (Geiger et al., Gobionellidae, sister to European marine genera such 2014; Knebelsberger & Thiel, 2014; Vukić et al., 2016), as Buenia Iljin, 1930, Deltentosteus Gill, 1863 and but there has not been a comprehensive phylogenetic Lebetus Winther, 1877, rather than the more distantly hypothesis inferred among and within sand goby related Gobius Linnaeus, 1758, Padogobius Iljin, 1933, genera. Zebrus (deBuen, 1930) and Zosterisessor Whitley, 1935 Significant sources of inter- and intraspecific in the family Gobiidae (complete generic composition sequence information for sand gobies are the various of gobiid and gobionellid lineages is given by Thacker, recent efforts to obtain DNA barcodes for European 2015). This placement explains the observation in fishes. The studies of Costa et al. (2012), Geiger et al. earlier phylogenetic studies that sand gobies are (2014), Knebelsberger & Thiel (2014) and Landi et al. deeply divided from common European marine gobies, (2014) have generated abundant data for the mito- as noted by McKay & Miller (1997) and Penzo et al. chondrial COI locus and demonstrated its usefulness (1998) and as depicted in the phylogenies of Huyse in species identification and application of conser- et al. (2004), Larmuseau et al. (2010) and Vanhove vation. Those data are also suitable for phylogenetic et al. (2012). analysis and are among the most reliable mitochon- Among sand gobies, the two largest genera drial genes for that purpose (Zardoya & Meyer, 1996). (Knipowitschia and Pomatoschistus) are distinct, both Although the COI locus generally does not provide in ecology and in distribution. Pomatoschistus species sufficient phylogenetic resolution for large-scale inhabit marine or occasionally estuarine waters and are analyses (Rubinoff & Holland, 2005), here the taxo- distributed along the coasts of the Baltic, northeastern nomic scope is narrow enough that COI is useful. In Atlantic, Mediterranean and Adriatic seas. They are the present study, we combine existing COI data with found in inshore mud, sand or rubble habitats (Miller, new sequences for several species of sand gobies sam- 1986). Knipowitschia prefers estuarine to fresh waters. pled from around mainland Greece and the Adriatic It is known from the streams and coastal lagoons of (Venetian Lagoon). We use this combined data set to the Adriatic, but from there its distribution stretches infer a comprehensive sand goby phylogeny and evalu- to the east, including the eastern Mediterranean, the ate how well current generic and species assignments Aegean and the shores of the Black, Caspian and concur with phylogenetic patterns. We then use the Aral seas. A few Knipowitschia are landlocked fresh- fossil record of sand gobies, along with a legacy cali- water endemics with very restricted ranges (Ahnelt, bration for Gobionellidae, to calibrate the phylogeny, 2011; Vukić et al., 2016). Economidichthys is a genus and we consider the ages and biogeographical patterns of two species that is known only from coastal lakes of various sand goby radiations in the context of the and rivers in western Greece (Miller, 2004; Kottelat & geological history of Europe.
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