Journal article

Gill Structure Linked to Ecological and Species Diversification in a Clade of Caddisflies


Authors listPauls, Steffen U.; Graf, Wolfram; Hjalmarsson, Anna E.; Lemmon, Alan; Lemmon, Emily Moriarty; Petersen, Malte; Vitecek, Simon; Frandsen, Paul B.

Publication year2023

Pages917-929

JournalArthropod Systematics & Phylogeny

Volume number81

ISSN1863-7221

eISSN1864-8312

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.3897/asp.81.e110014

PublisherPensoft Publishers


Abstract
Streams represent a special case of directional environmental gradients where ecological opportunity for diversification may be associated with upstream and downstream dispersal into habitats that differ in selective pressures. Temperature, current velocity and variability, sediment erosion dynamics and oxygen saturation are key environmental parameters that change in predictable ways from springs to river mouth. Many aquatic insects occupy specific longitudinal regions along these gradients, indicating a high degree of adaptation to these specific environmental conditions. In caddisflies, the evolution of tracheal gills in larval and pupal stages may be a major driver in oxygen uptake efficiency and ecological diversification. Here we study the evolution of larval gill structure in the Rhyacophila vulgaris species group using phylogenomic methods. Based on anchored hybrid enrichment, we sequenced 97 kbp of data representing 159 independent nuclear protein coding gene regions to infer the phylogeny of the R. vulgaris species group, whose species exhibit both high diversity of gill types and varied longitudinal preferences. We find that the different gill types evolved independently as derived characters in the genus and that gill structure is linked to the longitudinal habitat preference, thereby serving as a possible ecological key innovation in the R. vulgaris group.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation stylePauls, S., Graf, W., Hjalmarsson, A., Lemmon, A., Lemmon, E., Petersen, M., et al. (2023) Gill Structure Linked to Ecological and Species Diversification in a Clade of Caddisflies, Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny, 81, pp. 917-929. https://doi.org/10.3897/asp.81.e110014

APA Citation stylePauls, S., Graf, W., Hjalmarsson, A., Lemmon, A., Lemmon, E., Petersen, M., Vitecek, S., & Frandsen, P. (2023). Gill Structure Linked to Ecological and Species Diversification in a Clade of Caddisflies. Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny. 81, 917-929. https://doi.org/10.3897/asp.81.e110014



Keywords


Anchored hybrid enrichmentgill evolutionLIMNEPHILINI KOL INSECTAMORPHOLOGICAL ADAPTATIONSphylogenomicsRHYACOPHILIDAETRACHEAL GILLSTrichoptera


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Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 12:03