Apparently identical marine animals called placozoans, once thought to all belong to a single species, are revealed by their genomes to in fact belong to different genera, according to a new study published in the open access journal PLOS Biology by Michael Eitel and Gert Wörheide of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) in Munich, Germany, and colleagues. The genomic approach that they used is likely to be applicable to other groups of very small animals that lack physically distinct characteristics, including mites and nematodes.
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| This is Hoilungia hongkongensis [Credit: ans-Jürgen Osigus, Stiftung Tierärztliche Hochschule Hannover] |
To explore that possibility, the authors sequenced the genome of a placozoan lineage called H13, which previous studies showed was distantly related to the so-called H1 lineage, whose nuclear genome has previously been sequenced. They performed a multi-level comparison between the two genomes in a so-called 'taxogenomics' approach, including comparison of the physical location of genes within the chromosomes, analysis of duplicated genes, functional comparisons of sets of genes, and cross-phylum comparison of genetic distances on various taxonomic levels.
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| The symbolic split of what was previously recognized as a single speciesinto two species and two genera [Credit: Fabian Deister and Hans-Jürgen Osigus] |
"The lack of classical morphological differences in the placozoans and other small animals has led to an underappreciation of their taxonomic diversity at the genomic level," Wörheide said. "Our analytic approach is likely to be useful in revealing similar diversity in other taxa which lack morphologically distinguishing characters, such as copepods, rotifers, mites, and nematodes."
Source: PLOS [July 31, 2018]








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