Dataset

Deep-sea wood-boring bivalves (Xylophagaidae)

SWP OBIS Open in mapper Explore occurrences

Xylophagaid bivalves link terrestrial and deep-sea ecosystems by making energy and nutrients from sunken wood available to other animals. They bore into what can be sulphide-rich wood with their valves and digest it using bacterial enzymes. The evolutionary history of the roughly 60 named xylophagaid species remains largely unknown. We sequenced 18S and 28S rDNA genes of 59 specimens from the northeastern Pacific, southwestern Pacific off New Zealand and the Atlantic Ocean. This dataset contains details about the 59 xylophagaid specimens newly sequenced. We analysed these together with data from GenBank (thus increasing the species represented by sequences from 7 to 22) using maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference to reconstruct the group’s phylogeny. Newly discovered taxa are: Spiniapex gilsonorum n. gen., n. sp.; Feaya n. gen. (for Xylopholas dostwous) and Abditoconus n. gen. (for X. heterosiphon, X. anselli and X. brava that share a two-parted siphon and a periostracal cone). Specimens of Xyloredo from New Zealand, Brazil, the Gulf of Mexico and California USA are a single species. The genus Xylopholas is not unequivocally monophyletic; the presence/absence of a faecal mass in the distal intestine is the most conspicuous difference between the species included. The mesoplax (paired calcified plates over the anterior adductor) evolved convergently in two distinct clades assigned to the genus Xylophaga, which is not monophyletic. All clades represented by at least four taxa occur in every geographic area included. Rather than evolving to exploit sulphide associated with wood falls, xylophagaids may have evolved protection from it. This is indicated by the fact that in four clades, a thick periostracum covers the siphons that extend through the wood, while packed faecal pellets surround the siphons in one subclade, perhaps providing a physical barrier. In only one clade are fleshy siphons exposed to the wood.

Citation: Voight J R, Marshall B A, Judge J, Halanych K M, Li Y, Bernardino A F, Grewe F, Maddox J D (2022): Deep-sea wood-boring bivalves (Xylophagaidae). v1.0. Southwestern Pacific Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) Node. Dataset/Occurrence. https://nzobisipt.niwa.co.nz/resource?r=xylophagaidae_voight_et_al_2019&v=1.0

Published: March 20, 2022 at 23:52

URL: https://nzobisipt.niwa.co.nz/resource?r=xylophagaidae_voight_et_al_2019

Janet R.. Voight
Integrative Research Center, Field Museum of Natural History

Jenna Judge
University of California, Berkeley

Kenneth M Halanych
Department of Biological Sciences, Auburn University

Yuanning Li
Department of Biological Sciences, Auburn University

Felix Grewe
Integrative Research Center, Field Museum of Natural History

J Dylan Maddox
Integrative Research Center, Field Museum of Natural History

R. Voight
Integrative Research Center, Field Museum of Natural History

59
occurrence records
14
taxa
10
species

Taxa

Missing and invalid fields

Field Missing Invalid
eventDate 59
100.0%

Quality flags

The OBIS data quality flags are documented at https://github.com/iobis/obis-qc.

Flag Dropped Records
DEPTH_EXCEEDS_BATH 2
3.4%
ON_LAND 2
3.4%

Measurement types

DNA derived data