Testing relationships of a new form of boring bivalve: the interesting kind
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Judge, Jenna
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Friday Harbor Laboratories
Abstract
Sunken wood in marine environments supports a diverse community, the stars of the
show being the wood-boring bivalves. Shallow versus deep-sea woodfalls tend to only
attract bivalves from one of two clades; Teredinidae and Xylophagaidae respectively. A
recent deployment of experimental wood substrates returned a new form of boring
bivalve that has morphological characteristics (mesoplax and lack of viscera in the
siphons) indicating it as a xylophagaid, yet has hard pallet-like structures that had
previously only been observed in the shallow water teredinids. This study sought to
understand the phylogenetic placement of this new taxon (Xylophagaid A) with
consideration of the various siphon-associated hard parts that have been described across
boring bivalve groups. I sequenced the 18S and 28S rDNA nuclear genes from
Xylophagaid A and Xylophaga zierenbergi and aligned these with sequences from Distel
et al. (2011) for Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic analyses. The resulting
trees confirm Xylophagaid A as a member of Xylophagaidae and indicate a close
relationship to Xyloredo, a genus that has a calcareous tube. Additional taxonomic
sampling and closer morphological investigations are required, but this study indicates
preliminary evidence for convergence in siphon-associated hard parts in wood-boring
bivalves.
