Gorgocephalus yaaji

Huston, Daniel C., Cutmore, Scott C., Miller, Terrence L., Sasal, Pierre, Smit, Nico J. & Cribb, Thomas H., 2021, Gorgocephalidae (Digenea: Lepocreadioidea) in the Indo-West Pacific: new species, life-cycle data and perspectives on species delineation over geographic range, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 193 (4), pp. 1416-1455 : 1425-1430

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab002

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AAA956A8-14F7-49E4-888F-072FAC7D3826

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5761776

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03815953-FFBF-2E03-1781-7E01FD621EE6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gorgocephalus yaaji
status

 

Gorgocephalus yaaji View in CoL

This species was described by Bray & Cribb (2005) based on adult specimens obtained from Kyphosus vaigiensis , collected from off Lizard Island, GBR, Australia. Gorgocephalus yaaji is easily distinguished from all other species of the family, largely in having a more robust, dorsoventrally flattened body shape and in having the vitellarium extend into the forebody. Previously, Huston et al. (2016) generated ITS2 and 28S rDNA gene sequences from adult and intramolluscan specimens of G. yaaji from the type locality. In the present study, additional adult gorgocephalids morphologically consistent with G. yaaji were obtained from the type locality and from Rangiroa Atoll in French Polynesia and Sodwana Bay in South Africa ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ). Despite extensive investigation, including traditional morphometrics, PCA analyses and SEM imaging, we were unable to find any significant morphological differences between specimens from these three localities. Intramolluscan gorgocephalids from three Echinolittorina cinerea collected from Rangiroa Atoll, French Polynesia were molecularly matched to adults consistent with G. yaaji collected from the same locality. Furthermore, intramolluscan gorgocephalids have previously been collected from Austrolittorina unifasciata , from multiple locations along the coast of New South Wales, Australia ( O’Dwyer et al., 2015; Huston et al., 2016), but they had not previously been connected to an adult form. BLAST analyses showed that the sequences generated from intramolluscan gorgocephalids collected from Kioloa, NSW, matched sequences of ‘ Gorgocephalus sp. Aus’ from the study of O’Dwyer et al. (2015) with identity scores of 98–100%, demonstrating that gorgocephalids collected from A. unifasciata in the studies of O’Dwyer et al. (2015) and Huston et al. (2016) are conspecific. The present phylogenetic analyses ( Figs 3–6 View Figure 3 View Figure 4 View Figure 5 View Figure 6 ) demonstrate that these infections are representative of G. yaaji .

Despite adult gorgocephalids consistent with Gorgocephalus yaaji collected from across the IWP being morphologically indistinguishable, phylogenetic analyses of the ITS2 and 28S rDNA single-gene datasets did not recover a monophyletic G. yaaji clade ( Figs 4 View Figure 4 , 5 View Figure 5 ). In the ITS2 single-gene tree ( Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ), specimens morphologically consistent with G. yaaji were paraphyletic and formed three well-supported clades: specimens from Lizard Island (adults and intramolluscan stages), specimens from French Polynesia (adults and intramolluscan stages) + those from Kioloa, NSW, Australia (intramolluscan stages only), and those from South Africa (adults only). The first two of these clades were recovered in polytomy with the third + G. euryaleae + G. kyphosi , with G. graboides sister to all of these clades together. All ITS2 sequences for G. yaaji were identical for specimens within each locality and differed by 0–5 bp (0.0–1.1%) between localities ( Table 5 View Table 5 ). In the 28S rDNA single-gene tree ( Fig. 5 View Figure 5 ), G. yaaji was also recovered as paraphyletic, but with the South African representatives resolving as basal to all clades. The 28S rDNA sequences of G. yaaji differed by 0–6 bp (0.0–0.6%) between localities.

In contrast to analyses of ITS2 and 28S rDNA, those for the COI mtDNA single-gene dataset ( Fig. 3 View Figure 3 ) resolved all specimens morphologically consistent with Gorgocephalus yaaji as a monophyletic group, sister to the remaining lineages of the Gorgocephalidae , albeit without support in ML analysis. Sequences differed by only 0–3 bp (0.0–0.6%) within individual localities but differed by 12–62 bp (~3.0–13%) between localities. The largest difference (62 bp) was between specimens from French Polynesia and South Africa, representing opposite sides of the IWP marine region, although the South African specimens were also relatively divergent from those collected in Australia (50–58 bp or ~11–12%; Supporting Information, Table S5 View Table 5 ). The concatenated COI + ITS2 + 28S analyses ( Fig. 6 View Figure 6 ) also resolved representatives of G. yaaji in a monophyletic clade, with lower BI posterior probability support but higher ML bootstrap support.

Similar to the pattern observed for Gorgocephalus kyphosi, COI and ITS 2 sequences of G. yaaji , generated from one Australian locality (Kioloa, NSW) were more similar to those from French Polynesia than to those from another Australian locality, Lizard Island, GBR (Supporting Information, Table S5 View Table 5 ). Such molecular variation coupled with the lack of monophyly in the ITS2 and 28S rDNA trees suggests the possibility of multiple species. However, in the ITS2 and 28S trees, sequences associated with specimens morphologically indistinguishable from G. yaaji , result in a paraphyletic, rather than a polyphyletic, G. yaaji (i.e. sequences are more, or at least, as related to one another as they are to other species represented). There are also no hostlevel distinctions to delineate additional species within the G. yaaji concept; the species appears to have a broad definitive and intermediate host range (within the confines of the Kyphosidae and Littorinidae ). The issues with paraphyly in the ITS2 and 28S trees might be alleviated with sequences from additional specimens collected from localities between Australia and South Africa. However, without further evidence there appears no justification for splitting the G. yaaji clade into multiple morphologically cryptic species. Sequences of G. yaaji differ from the others species of the Gorgocephalidae recognized here by 66–88 bp (14–19%), 5–16 bp (1.1–3.5%) and 12–21 bp (1.2–2.1%) in the COI, ITS2 and 28S gene regions, respectively.

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