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Browsing by Author "Halanych, Kenneth M."

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    Annelid phylogeny and the status of Sipuncula and Echiura
    (2007-04-05)
    Struck, Torsten H.
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    Schult, Nancy
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    Kusen, Tiffany
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    Hickman, Emily
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    Bleidorn, Christoph  
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    McHugh, Damhnait
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    Halanych, Kenneth M.
    Annelida comprises an ancient and ecologically important animal phylum with over 16,500 described species and members are the dominant macrofauna of the deep sea. Traditionally, two major groups are distinguished: Clitellata (including earthworms, leeches) and "Polychaeta" (mostly marine worms). Recent analyses of molecular data suggest that Annelida may include other taxa once considered separate phyla (i.e., Echiura, and Sipuncula) and that Clitellata are derived annelids, thus rendering "Polychaeta" paraphyletic; however, this contradicts classification schemes of annelids developed from recent analyses of morphological characters. Given that deep-level evolutionary relationships of Annelida are poorly understood, we have analyzed comprehensive datasets based on nuclear and mitochondrial genes, and have applied rigorous testing of alternative hypotheses so that we can move towards the robust reconstruction of annelid history needed to interpret animal body plan evolution.
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    Illuminating the base of the annelid tree using transcriptomics
    (2014-06)
    Weigert, Anne
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    Helm, Conrad
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    Meyer, Matthias
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    Nickel, Birgit
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    Arendt, Detlev
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    Hausdorf, Bernhard
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    Santos, Scott R.
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    Halanych, Kenneth M.
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    Purschke, Günter
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    Bleidorn, Christoph  
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    Struck, Torsten H.
    Annelida is one of three animal groups possessing segmentation and is central in considerations about the evolution of different character traits. It has even been proposed that the bilaterian ancestor resembled an annelid. However, a robust phylogeny of Annelida, especially with respect to the basal relationships, has been lacking. Our study based on transcriptomic data comprising 68,750-170,497 amino acid sites from 305 to 622 proteins resolves annelid relationships, including Chaetopteridae, Amphinomidae, Sipuncula, Oweniidae, and Magelonidae in the basal part of the tree. Myzostomida, which have been indicated to belong to the basal radiation as well, are now found deeply nested within Annelida as sister group to Errantia in most analyses. On the basis of our reconstruction of a robust annelid phylogeny, we show that the basal branching taxa include a huge variety of life styles such as tube dwelling and deposit feeding, endobenthic and burrowing, tubicolous and filter feeding, and errant and carnivorous forms. Ancestral character state reconstruction suggests that the ancestral annelid possessed a pair of either sensory or grooved palps, bicellular eyes, biramous parapodia bearing simple chaeta, and lacked nuchal organs. Because the oldest fossil of Annelida is reported for Sipuncula (520 Ma), we infer that the early diversification of annelids took place at least in the Lower Cambrian.
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    Mitochondrial genome and nuclear sequence data support myzostomida as part of the annelid radiation
    (2007-08)
    Bleidorn, Christoph  
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    Eeckhaut, Igor
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    Podsiadlowski, Lars
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    Schult, Nancy
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    McHugh, Damhnait
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    Halanych, Kenneth M.
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    Milinkovitch, Michel C.
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    Tiedemann, Ralph
    The echinoderm symbionts Myzostomida are marine worms that show an enigmatic lophotrochozoan body plan. Historically, their phylogenetic origins were obscured due to disagreement about which morphological features are evolutionarily conserved, but now most morphological evidence points to annelid origins. In contrast, recent phylogenetic analyses using different molecular markers produced variable results regarding the position of myzostomids, but all suggested these worms are not derived annelids. To reexamine this issue, we analyzed data from nuclear genes (18S rDNA, 28S rDNA, Myosin II, and Elongation Factor-1alpha), and a nearly complete myzostomid mitochondrial genome. Here, we show that the molecular data are in agreement with the morphological evidence that myzostomids are part of the annelid radiation. This result is robustly supported by mitochondrial (gene order and sequence data) and nuclear data, as well as by recent ultrastructural investigations. Using Bayes factor comparison, alternative hypotheses are shown to lack support. Thus, myzostomids probably evolved from a segmented ancestor and gained a derived anatomy during their long evolutionary history as echinoderm symbionts.
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    Molecules reject an opheliid affinity forTravisia(Annelida)
    (2010)
    Paul, Christiane
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    Halanych, Kenneth M.
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    Tiedemann, Ralph
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    Bleidorn, Christoph  
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    On the phylogenetic position of Myzostomida: can 77 genes get it wrong?
    (2009-07-01)
    Bleidorn, Christoph  
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    Podsiadlowski, Lars
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    Zhong, Min
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    Eeckhaut, Igor
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    Hartmann, Stefanie
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    Halanych, Kenneth M.
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    Tiedemann, Ralph
    Phylogenomic analyses recently became popular to address questions about deep metazoan phylogeny. Ribosomal proteins (RP) dominate many of these analyses or are, in some cases, the only genes included. Despite initial hopes, phylogenomic analyses including tens to hundreds of genes still fail to robustly place many bilaterian taxa.

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