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Systematics and character evolution of capitate hydrozoans. / Maggioni, Davide; Schuchert, Peter; Ostrovsky, Andrew N.; Schiavo, Andrea; Hoeksema, Bert W. ; Pica, Daniela; Piraino, Stefano ; Arrigoni, Roberto; Seveso, Davide; Montalbetti, Enrico ; Galli, Paolo; Montano, Simone.

In: Cladistics, 19.12.2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Maggioni, D, Schuchert, P, Ostrovsky, AN, Schiavo, A, Hoeksema, BW, Pica, D, Piraino, S, Arrigoni, R, Seveso, D, Montalbetti, E, Galli, P & Montano, S 2023, 'Systematics and character evolution of capitate hydrozoans', Cladistics. https://doi.org/10.1111/cla.12567

APA

Maggioni, D., Schuchert, P., Ostrovsky, A. N., Schiavo, A., Hoeksema, B. W., Pica, D., Piraino, S., Arrigoni, R., Seveso, D., Montalbetti, E., Galli, P., & Montano, S. (2023). Systematics and character evolution of capitate hydrozoans. Cladistics. https://doi.org/10.1111/cla.12567

Vancouver

Maggioni D, Schuchert P, Ostrovsky AN, Schiavo A, Hoeksema BW, Pica D et al. Systematics and character evolution of capitate hydrozoans. Cladistics. 2023 Dec 19. https://doi.org/10.1111/cla.12567

Author

Maggioni, Davide ; Schuchert, Peter ; Ostrovsky, Andrew N. ; Schiavo, Andrea ; Hoeksema, Bert W. ; Pica, Daniela ; Piraino, Stefano ; Arrigoni, Roberto ; Seveso, Davide ; Montalbetti, Enrico ; Galli, Paolo ; Montano, Simone. / Systematics and character evolution of capitate hydrozoans. In: Cladistics. 2023.

BibTeX

@article{04cf2edf48eb4497904908fbe6be54d4,
title = "Systematics and character evolution of capitate hydrozoans",
abstract = "Capitate hydrozoans are a morphologically and ecologically diverse hydrozoan suborder, currently including about 200 species. Being grouped in two clades, Corynida and Zancleida, these hydrozoans still show a number of taxonomic uncertainties at the species, genus and family levels. Many Capitata species established symbiotic relationships with other benthic organisms, including bryozoans, other cnidarians, molluscs and poriferans, as well as with planktonic dinoflagellates for mixotrophic relationships and with bacteria for thiotrophic ectosymbioses. Our study aimed at providing an updated and comprehensive phylogeny reconstruction of the suborder, at modelling the evolution of selected morphological and ecological characters, and at testing evolutionary relationships between the symbiotic lifestyle and the other characters, by integrating taxonomic, ecological and evolutionary data. The phylogenetic hypotheses here presented shed light on the evolutionary relationships within Capitata, with most families and genera being recovered as monophyletic. The genus Zanclea and family Zancleidae, however, were divided into four divergent clades, requiring the establishment of the new genus Apatizanclea and the new combinations for species in Zanclea and Halocoryne genera. The ancestral state reconstructions revealed that symbiosis arose multiple times in the evolutionary history of the Capitata, and that homoplasy is a common phenomenon in the group. Correlations were found between the evolution of symbiosis and morphologica characters, such as the perisarc. Overall, our results highlighted that the use of genetic data and a complete knowledge of the life cycles are strongly needed to disentangle taxonomic and systematic issues in capitate hydrozoans. Finally, the colonization of tropical habitat appears to have influenced the evolution of a symbiotic lifestyle, playing important roles in the evolution of the group.",
author = "Davide Maggioni and Peter Schuchert and Ostrovsky, {Andrew N.} and Andrea Schiavo and Hoeksema, {Bert W.} and Daniela Pica and Stefano Piraino and Roberto Arrigoni and Davide Seveso and Enrico Montalbetti and Paolo Galli and Simone Montano",
year = "2023",
month = dec,
day = "19",
doi = "10.1111/cla.12567",
language = "English",
journal = "Cladistics",
issn = "0748-3007",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Systematics and character evolution of capitate hydrozoans

AU - Maggioni, Davide

AU - Schuchert, Peter

AU - Ostrovsky, Andrew N.

AU - Schiavo, Andrea

AU - Hoeksema, Bert W.

AU - Pica, Daniela

AU - Piraino, Stefano

AU - Arrigoni, Roberto

AU - Seveso, Davide

AU - Montalbetti, Enrico

AU - Galli, Paolo

AU - Montano, Simone

PY - 2023/12/19

Y1 - 2023/12/19

N2 - Capitate hydrozoans are a morphologically and ecologically diverse hydrozoan suborder, currently including about 200 species. Being grouped in two clades, Corynida and Zancleida, these hydrozoans still show a number of taxonomic uncertainties at the species, genus and family levels. Many Capitata species established symbiotic relationships with other benthic organisms, including bryozoans, other cnidarians, molluscs and poriferans, as well as with planktonic dinoflagellates for mixotrophic relationships and with bacteria for thiotrophic ectosymbioses. Our study aimed at providing an updated and comprehensive phylogeny reconstruction of the suborder, at modelling the evolution of selected morphological and ecological characters, and at testing evolutionary relationships between the symbiotic lifestyle and the other characters, by integrating taxonomic, ecological and evolutionary data. The phylogenetic hypotheses here presented shed light on the evolutionary relationships within Capitata, with most families and genera being recovered as monophyletic. The genus Zanclea and family Zancleidae, however, were divided into four divergent clades, requiring the establishment of the new genus Apatizanclea and the new combinations for species in Zanclea and Halocoryne genera. The ancestral state reconstructions revealed that symbiosis arose multiple times in the evolutionary history of the Capitata, and that homoplasy is a common phenomenon in the group. Correlations were found between the evolution of symbiosis and morphologica characters, such as the perisarc. Overall, our results highlighted that the use of genetic data and a complete knowledge of the life cycles are strongly needed to disentangle taxonomic and systematic issues in capitate hydrozoans. Finally, the colonization of tropical habitat appears to have influenced the evolution of a symbiotic lifestyle, playing important roles in the evolution of the group.

AB - Capitate hydrozoans are a morphologically and ecologically diverse hydrozoan suborder, currently including about 200 species. Being grouped in two clades, Corynida and Zancleida, these hydrozoans still show a number of taxonomic uncertainties at the species, genus and family levels. Many Capitata species established symbiotic relationships with other benthic organisms, including bryozoans, other cnidarians, molluscs and poriferans, as well as with planktonic dinoflagellates for mixotrophic relationships and with bacteria for thiotrophic ectosymbioses. Our study aimed at providing an updated and comprehensive phylogeny reconstruction of the suborder, at modelling the evolution of selected morphological and ecological characters, and at testing evolutionary relationships between the symbiotic lifestyle and the other characters, by integrating taxonomic, ecological and evolutionary data. The phylogenetic hypotheses here presented shed light on the evolutionary relationships within Capitata, with most families and genera being recovered as monophyletic. The genus Zanclea and family Zancleidae, however, were divided into four divergent clades, requiring the establishment of the new genus Apatizanclea and the new combinations for species in Zanclea and Halocoryne genera. The ancestral state reconstructions revealed that symbiosis arose multiple times in the evolutionary history of the Capitata, and that homoplasy is a common phenomenon in the group. Correlations were found between the evolution of symbiosis and morphologica characters, such as the perisarc. Overall, our results highlighted that the use of genetic data and a complete knowledge of the life cycles are strongly needed to disentangle taxonomic and systematic issues in capitate hydrozoans. Finally, the colonization of tropical habitat appears to have influenced the evolution of a symbiotic lifestyle, playing important roles in the evolution of the group.

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/ccb35276-3aab-35d1-80bc-93e0af9dcfac/

U2 - 10.1111/cla.12567

DO - 10.1111/cla.12567

M3 - Article

JO - Cladistics

JF - Cladistics

SN - 0748-3007

ER -

ID: 115064433