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mtDNA analysis of Mytilopsis (Bivalvia, Dreissenidae) invasion in Brazil reveals the existence of two species
Fernandes, M.R.; Salgueiro, F.; Miyahira, I.C.; Caetano, C.H.S. (2018). mtDNA analysis of Mytilopsis (Bivalvia, Dreissenidae) invasion in Brazil reveals the existence of two species. Hydrobiologia 817(1): 97-110. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10750-018-3602-3
In: Hydrobiologia. Springer: The Hague. ISSN 0018-8158; e-ISSN 1573-5117, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Mytilopsis leucophaeata (Conrad, 1831) [WoRMS]; Mytilopsis sallei (Récluz, 1849) [WoRMS]
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Dark false mussel; Exotic species; Estuarine bivalves; DNA barcoding

Authors  Top 
  • Fernandes, M.R.
  • Salgueiro, F.
  • Miyahira, I.C.
  • Caetano, C.H.S.

Abstract
    The genus Mytilopsis includes some of the most invasive estuarine bivalves in the world, and M. leucophaeata (native to the Gulf of Mexico) and M. sallei (indigenous in the Caribbean Sea) are the most often reported species. Molecular investigations of the COI gene in invasive populations of M. leucophaeata in Europe found only one haplotype, whereas the invasive M. sallei in Asia had high haplotype diversity. The present study investigated COI variability of invasive populations previously identified as M. leucophaeata in Brazil, located at the cities of Recife and Rio de Janeiro. Our genetic analysis revealed that the record of M. leucophaeata from Recife appears erroneous; this population forms a clade adjacent to but genetically separated from the Asian M. cf. sallei. Similarly, samples from Rio de Janeiro clustered close to but not within European/North American sequences of M. leucophaeata. The Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery test suggested the existence of three species: M. leucophaeata, M. cf. sallei (Asia), and M. cf. sallei (Recife), which merit confirmation with nuclear DNA sequences. The discovery of two lineages of Mytilopsis in Brazil augments concerns about their expansion.

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