Phylogenomic Analysis of Brachiopoda and Phoronida Implications for Morphological Evolution, Biomineralization, and the Cambrian Radiation


Meeting Abstract

124-3  Sunday, Jan. 7 10:45 – 11:00  Phylogenomic Analysis of Brachiopoda and Phoronida: Implications for Morphological Evolution, Biomineralization, and the Cambrian Radiation. BUTLER, A. D.*; EITEL, M; WöRHEIDE , G; CARLSON, S. J.; SPERLING, E. A.; Stanford University ; Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich. ; Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich. ; University of California, Davis ; Stanford University aodhanb@stanford.edu

Within Lophotrochozoa, brachiopods and allied clades are among the first biomineralized Cambrian metazoans to appear and represent a major component of the oldest known fossil record of animals. While the brachiopod fossil record is ultimately the key to determining character homology and polarity during the evolution of the brachiopod body plan, reading this record has been clouded by disagreement about relationships among the crown clades. Specifically, the monophyly of brachiopods with respect to phoronids, and the relationships of the calcitic to phosphatic-shelled brachiopods. Much of this phylogenetic uncertainty stems from difficulties in rooting the brachiopods and their sister groups within Lophotrochozoa. Phylogenomics—the analysis of hundreds to thousands of orthologous genes in concatenated supermatrices—has been instrumental in resolving difficult phylogenetic relationships in diverse metazoan clades. We have conducted the first such extensive phylogenomic investigation of Brachiopoda/Phoronida with analyses that combine novel sequence data with all publicly available brachiopod and phoronid transcriptomes and a broad range of protostome outgroups. Analyses were run under best fitting evolutionary models (LG amino acid matrix and gamma) utilizing a published 106-gene lophotrochozoan ortholog set. Preliminary results strongly (99% bootstrap) support a monophyletic Brachiopoda with Phoronida as sister group within Lophotrochozoa. Weak support is found for Inarticulata. Investigation of fossil and molecular data in this integrated framework provides novel insight into brachiopod biomineralization and evolutionary patterns during the Cambrian radiation.

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