Journal article

The importance of offshore origination revealed through ophiuroid phylogenomics

G Bribiesca-Contreras, H Verbruggen, AF Hugall, TD O’Hara

Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences | Published : 2017

Abstract

Our knowledge of macro-evolutionary processes in the deep sea is poor, leading to much speculation about whether the deep sea is a source or sink of evolutionary adaptation. Here, we use a phylogenetic approach, on large molecular (688 species, 275 kbp) and distributional datasets (104 513 records) across an entire class of marine invertebrates (Ophiuroidea), to infer rates of bathymetric range shift over time between shallow and deep water biomes. Biome conservation is evident through the phylogeny, with the majority of species in most clades distributed within the same bathome. Despite this, bathymetric shifts have occurred. We inferred from ancestral reconstructions that eurybathic or int..

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University of Melbourne Researchers