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Evolution of parental care and ovulation behavior in oysters

  • University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

80 Scopus citations

Abstract

Approximately half of all living oysters brood offspring in the inhalant chamber of their mantle cavities; the remainder are broadcast spawners which do not engage in parental care of young. Ostreid ovulation involves a complex behavioral sequence that results in the countercurrent passage of newly spawned eggs through the gills (ctenidia) and into the inhalant chamber. We constructed molecular and combined-evidence phylogenetic trees to test hypotheses concerning the directionality of parental care evolution, and the evolutionary significance of the trans-ctenidial ovulation pathway, in the Ostreidae. Representatives of all three ostreid subfamilies, together with gryphaeid and nonostreoidean pterioid outgroups, were sequenced for a 941-nucleotide fragment of the 28S ribosomal gene. Our phylogenetic analyses indicate that (1) the Ostreidae are robustly monophyletic, (2) broadcast spawning and larval planktotrophy are ancestral ostreid traits, (3) trans-ctenidial ovulation predates the evolution of parental care in ostreid lineages, and (4) brooding originated once in the common ancestor of the Ostreinae/Lophinae, involved a modification of the final behavioral step in the ancestral ovulation pathway, and has been retained in all descendent lineages. Our data permit an independent test of fossil-based ostreid phylogenetic hypotheses and provide novel insights into oyster evolution and systematics. (C) 2000 Academic Press.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)301-313
Number of pages13
JournalMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
Volume15
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2000

Keywords

  • 28S rDNA
  • Development
  • Mollusca
  • Ostreidae
  • Phylogeny
  • Reproduction

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