
Adaptive radiation in extremophilic Dorvilleidae (Annelida): diversification of a single colonizer or multiple independent lineages?
Author(s) -
Thornhill Daniel J.,
Struck Torsten H.,
Ebbe Brigitte,
Lee Raymond W.,
Mendoza Guillermo F.,
Levin Lisa A.,
Halanych Kenneth M.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.314
Subject(s) - biology , extreme environment , ecology , habitat , clade , adaptive radiation , lineage (genetic) , microbial mat , biological dispersal , petroleum seep , evolutionary biology , context (archaeology) , phylogenetics , gene , paleontology , population , methane , biochemistry , demography , sociology , bacteria , cyanobacteria
Metazoan inhabitants of extreme environments typically evolved from forms found in less extreme habitats. Understanding the prevalence with which animals move into and ultimately thrive in extreme environments is critical to elucidating how complex life adapts to extreme conditions. Methane seep sediments along the O regon and C alifornia margins have low oxygen and very high hydrogen sulfide levels, rendering them inhospitable to many life forms. Nonetheless, several closely related lineages of dorvilleid annelids, including members of O phryotrocha , P arougia , and E xallopus , thrive at these sites in association with bacterial mats and vesicomyid clam beds. These organisms are ideal for examining adaptive radiations in extreme environments. Did dorvilleid annelids invade these extreme environments once and then diversify? Alternatively, did multiple independent lineages adapt to seep conditions? To address these questions, we examined the evolutionary history of methane‐seep dorvilleids using 16S and Cyt b genes in an ecological context. Our results indicate that dorvilleids invaded these extreme habitats at least four times, implying preadaptation to life at seeps. Additionally, we recovered considerably more dorvilleid diversity than is currently recognized. A total of 3 major clades (designated “ O phryotrocha, ” “Mixed Genera” and “ P arougia ”) and 12 terminal lineages or species were encountered. Two of these lineages represented a known species, P arougia oregonensis , whereas the remaining 10 lineages were newly discovered species. Certain lineages exhibited affinity to geography, habitat, sediment depth, and/or diet, suggesting that dorvilleids at methane seeps radiated via specialization and resource partitioning.