Monogenean anchor morphometry: systematic value, phylogenetic signal, and evolution

Institute of Mathematical Sciences, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, W.P. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Institute of Biological Sciences, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, W.P. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Centre for Tropical Biodiversity Research, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, W.P. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
DOI
10.7287/peerj.preprints.1283v1
Subject Areas
Biodiversity, Computational Biology, Evolutionary Studies, Taxonomy, Zoology
Keywords
cluster heat map, geometric morphometrics, Ligophorus, molecular phylogeny, phylomorphospace, principal component analysis, size and shape variation, Monogenea, morphological integration, phylogenetic regression
Copyright
© 2015 Khang et al.
Licence
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ PrePrints) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
Cite this article
Khang TF, Soo OYM, Tan WB, Lim LHS. 2015. Monogenean anchor morphometry: systematic value, phylogenetic signal, and evolution. PeerJ PrePrints 3:e1283v1

Abstract

Anchors are important attachment appendages that prevent the physical dislodging of a monogenean parasite from fish host gills. Common descent and evolutionary processes have left their mark on anchor morphometry, in the form of patterns of shape and size variation useful for systematic and evolutionary studies. We used a geometric morphometric approach to explore anchor shape variation in 13 Ligophorus (Monogenea:Ancyrocephalidae) species infecting two marine mugilid (Teleostei: Mugilidae) fish hosts (Moolgarda buchanani and Liza subviridis) in the waters off West Peninsular Malaysia. Molecular sequence data from three nuclear markers: 28S rRNA, 18S rRNA and ITS1, were used to infer a maximum likelihood phylogeny to enable visualization of shape evolution in phylomorphospace. For inferring patterns of size evolution in the phylogeny, we used a size measure based on the first principal component of all pairwise Euclidean distances between landmarks. Cluster heat map and principal component analysis showed that anchor shape variation had sufficient systematic information for delimiting 12 of the 13 species. Adams' multivariate K test indicated significant correlation between anchor shape and phylogeny (p-value = 0.0001). We also discovered that characters based on anchor shaft shape, the length between inner and outer root tips and the length between inner root tip and the dent point were more phylogenetically informative than inner and outer lengths, as indicated by a maximum parsimony tree that was better resolved and had major clades congruent with those of the molecular phylogenetic tree. Continuous character mapping of size onto the inferred molecular phylogeny and Rayleigh’s test for departure from directional uniformity in each species’s landmark relative to the ancestor indicated that species infecting M. buchanani generally evolved larger and more robust anchors, while those infecting L. subviridis generally evolved smaller and more delicate anchors. Nevertheless, phylogenetic regression of anchor shape against body size and anchor size showed significant correlation (p-value = 0.02) between anchor shape and size, suggesting morphometric constraints in anchor evolution. Finally, morphological integration analysis revealed tight integration between the root and point compartments within anchors, confirming that the anchor functions as a single, fully integrated module. The present work is supported by the development of integrative analytical tools in the form of a new R package – monogeneaGM. By lowering barriers to data integration and analysis , we aim to encourage the scientific community to collect and contribute morphometric and genetic data from other Ligophorus species, which are essential for developing Ligophorus as a model system for understanding association between patterns of anchor shape size evolution and biodiversity in the Monogenea.

Author Comment

This manuscript draft is version 1.0 and will be submitted soon for peer-review elsewhere.