Resolving taxonomic confusion in the sea chubs (F. Kyphosidae)

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

Standard

Resolving taxonomic confusion in the sea chubs (F. Kyphosidae). / Knudsen, Steen Wilhelm; Clements, Kendall.

2013.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

Harvard

Knudsen, SW & Clements, K 2013, 'Resolving taxonomic confusion in the sea chubs (F. Kyphosidae)'. <http://www.fish-isj.jp/9ipfc/>

APA

Knudsen, S. W., & Clements, K. (2013). Resolving taxonomic confusion in the sea chubs (F. Kyphosidae). http://www.fish-isj.jp/9ipfc/

Vancouver

Knudsen SW, Clements K. Resolving taxonomic confusion in the sea chubs (F. Kyphosidae). 2013.

Author

Knudsen, Steen Wilhelm ; Clements, Kendall. / Resolving taxonomic confusion in the sea chubs (F. Kyphosidae). 1 s.

Bibtex

@conference{b7091b0bd945426292c2da9289394267,
title = "Resolving taxonomic confusion in the sea chubs (F. Kyphosidae)",
abstract = "Sea chubs are widespread reef inhabitants of tropical and temperate reefs, but the relationships and taxonomy of the 16 valid species (Hermosilla,Kyphosus, Neoscorpis and Sectator) are confused because of problems with character differentiation. We undertook a molecular phylogeneticstudy using complete taxon sampling from these fishes, and species delimitation was determined on the basis of congruence betweenmonophyletic groupings in the molecular phylogeny combined with comparison of morphological variation in type material. The results overallindicate that our understanding of species diversity and higher level relationships require revision.Topologies including a range of outgroup taxa consistently failed to retrieve a monophyletic Kyphosidae sensu Nelson (2006), i.e. Kyphosus +Girella + Scorpis. Our work thus supports previous phylogenetic studies in suggesting that Kyphosidae, Scorpididae and Girellidae be consideredseparate families. Both Hermosilla and Sectator are now considered junior synonyms of Kyphosus. The distribution of Kyphosus species wasreconsidered based on the taxonomic revision, indicating that four species (K. bigibbus, K. cinerascens, K. sectatrix and K. vaigiensis) are foundin both the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific regions. The Hawaiian K. sandwicensis was found to be a junior synonym of east Pacific K. elegans. TheAtlantic endemic Kyphosus incisor and the eastern Pacific K. analogus were found to be conspecific with the Indo-Pacific K. vaigiensis.Kyphosus gallveii, only known from Saint Helena, and the Pacific K. pacificus and K. lutescens, the latter endemic to the Revillagigedo Islandsin the east Pacific, were found to be conspecific with K. sectatrix, previously considered an Atlantic endemic. A higher number of gill rakers wasfound to be characteristic of all tropical species, suggesting this character changed in response to the invasion of low latitude reefs – perhaps as aresponse to a change in diet from large sub-tropical macroalgae to smaller algal growth on tropical reefs. Furthermore, careful examination ofmultiple molecular markers and a re-examination of morphological variation confirmed that a previously unrecognised species (Kyphosusgladius sp. nov.) had been clumped with Kyphosus sydneyanus in Western Australia. Overall, the family contains fewer species (12) thanpreviously thought, but four of these species are considerably more widespread than expected",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Taxonomi, Fylogeni",
author = "Knudsen, {Steen Wilhelm} and Kendall Clements",
note = "Abstracts og pr{\ae}sentationer kan hentes fra http://www.fish-isj.jp/9ipfc/",
year = "2013",
month = jul,
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Resolving taxonomic confusion in the sea chubs (F. Kyphosidae)

AU - Knudsen, Steen Wilhelm

AU - Clements, Kendall

N1 - Abstracts og præsentationer kan hentes fra http://www.fish-isj.jp/9ipfc/

PY - 2013/7

Y1 - 2013/7

N2 - Sea chubs are widespread reef inhabitants of tropical and temperate reefs, but the relationships and taxonomy of the 16 valid species (Hermosilla,Kyphosus, Neoscorpis and Sectator) are confused because of problems with character differentiation. We undertook a molecular phylogeneticstudy using complete taxon sampling from these fishes, and species delimitation was determined on the basis of congruence betweenmonophyletic groupings in the molecular phylogeny combined with comparison of morphological variation in type material. The results overallindicate that our understanding of species diversity and higher level relationships require revision.Topologies including a range of outgroup taxa consistently failed to retrieve a monophyletic Kyphosidae sensu Nelson (2006), i.e. Kyphosus +Girella + Scorpis. Our work thus supports previous phylogenetic studies in suggesting that Kyphosidae, Scorpididae and Girellidae be consideredseparate families. Both Hermosilla and Sectator are now considered junior synonyms of Kyphosus. The distribution of Kyphosus species wasreconsidered based on the taxonomic revision, indicating that four species (K. bigibbus, K. cinerascens, K. sectatrix and K. vaigiensis) are foundin both the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific regions. The Hawaiian K. sandwicensis was found to be a junior synonym of east Pacific K. elegans. TheAtlantic endemic Kyphosus incisor and the eastern Pacific K. analogus were found to be conspecific with the Indo-Pacific K. vaigiensis.Kyphosus gallveii, only known from Saint Helena, and the Pacific K. pacificus and K. lutescens, the latter endemic to the Revillagigedo Islandsin the east Pacific, were found to be conspecific with K. sectatrix, previously considered an Atlantic endemic. A higher number of gill rakers wasfound to be characteristic of all tropical species, suggesting this character changed in response to the invasion of low latitude reefs – perhaps as aresponse to a change in diet from large sub-tropical macroalgae to smaller algal growth on tropical reefs. Furthermore, careful examination ofmultiple molecular markers and a re-examination of morphological variation confirmed that a previously unrecognised species (Kyphosusgladius sp. nov.) had been clumped with Kyphosus sydneyanus in Western Australia. Overall, the family contains fewer species (12) thanpreviously thought, but four of these species are considerably more widespread than expected

AB - Sea chubs are widespread reef inhabitants of tropical and temperate reefs, but the relationships and taxonomy of the 16 valid species (Hermosilla,Kyphosus, Neoscorpis and Sectator) are confused because of problems with character differentiation. We undertook a molecular phylogeneticstudy using complete taxon sampling from these fishes, and species delimitation was determined on the basis of congruence betweenmonophyletic groupings in the molecular phylogeny combined with comparison of morphological variation in type material. The results overallindicate that our understanding of species diversity and higher level relationships require revision.Topologies including a range of outgroup taxa consistently failed to retrieve a monophyletic Kyphosidae sensu Nelson (2006), i.e. Kyphosus +Girella + Scorpis. Our work thus supports previous phylogenetic studies in suggesting that Kyphosidae, Scorpididae and Girellidae be consideredseparate families. Both Hermosilla and Sectator are now considered junior synonyms of Kyphosus. The distribution of Kyphosus species wasreconsidered based on the taxonomic revision, indicating that four species (K. bigibbus, K. cinerascens, K. sectatrix and K. vaigiensis) are foundin both the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific regions. The Hawaiian K. sandwicensis was found to be a junior synonym of east Pacific K. elegans. TheAtlantic endemic Kyphosus incisor and the eastern Pacific K. analogus were found to be conspecific with the Indo-Pacific K. vaigiensis.Kyphosus gallveii, only known from Saint Helena, and the Pacific K. pacificus and K. lutescens, the latter endemic to the Revillagigedo Islandsin the east Pacific, were found to be conspecific with K. sectatrix, previously considered an Atlantic endemic. A higher number of gill rakers wasfound to be characteristic of all tropical species, suggesting this character changed in response to the invasion of low latitude reefs – perhaps as aresponse to a change in diet from large sub-tropical macroalgae to smaller algal growth on tropical reefs. Furthermore, careful examination ofmultiple molecular markers and a re-examination of morphological variation confirmed that a previously unrecognised species (Kyphosusgladius sp. nov.) had been clumped with Kyphosus sydneyanus in Western Australia. Overall, the family contains fewer species (12) thanpreviously thought, but four of these species are considerably more widespread than expected

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Taxonomi

KW - Fylogeni

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

ER -

ID: 120527364