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Characteristics of the complete mitochondrial genome ofSuhpalacsa longialata(Neuroptera, Ascalaphidae) and its phylogenetic implications
Author(s) -
Xinyan Gao,
Yin-Yin Cai,
DanNa Yu,
Kenneth B. Storey,
JiaYong Zhang
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.5914
Subject(s) - biology , neuroptera , mitochondrial dna , transfer rna , genetics , phylogenetic tree , gene , genome , evolutionary biology , rna , ecology , larva
The owlflies (Family Ascalaphidae) belong to the Neuroptera but are often mistaken as dragonflies because of morphological characters. To date, only three mitochondrial genomes of Ascalaphidae, namely Libelloides macaronius ; Ascaloptynx appendiculatus ; Ascalohybris subjacens , are published in GenBank, meaning that they are greatly under-represented in comparison with the 430 described species reported in this family. In this study, we sequenced and described the complete mitochondrial genome of Suhpalacsa longialata (Neuroptera, Ascalaphidae). The total length of the S. longialata mitogenome was 15,911 bp, which is the longest known to date among the available family members of Ascalaphidae. However, the size of each gene was similar to the other three Ascalaphidae species. The S. longialata mitogenome included a transposition of tRNA Cys and tRNA Trp genes and formed an unusual gene arrangement tRNA Cys -tRNA Trp -tRNA Tyr (CWY). It is likely that the transposition occurred by a duplication of both genes followed by random loss of partial duplicated genes. The nucleotide composition of the S. longialata mitogenome was as follows: A = 41.0%, T = 33.8%, C = 15.5%, G = 9.7%. Both Bayesian inference and ML analyses strongly supported S. longialata as a sister clade to ( Ascalohybris subjacens + L. macaronius ), and indicated that Ascalaphidae is not monophyletic.

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