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Independent adaptation to riverine habitats allowed survival of ancient cetacean lineages.


ABSTRACT: The four species of "river dolphins" are associated with six separate great river systems on three subcontinents and have been grouped for more than a century into a single taxon based on their similar appearance. However, several morphologists recently questioned the monophyly of that group. By using phylogenetic analyses of nucleotide sequences from three mitochondrial and two nuclear genes, we demonstrate with statistical significance that extant river dolphins are not monophyletic and suggest that they are relict species whose adaptation to riverine habitats incidentally insured their survival against major environmental changes in the marine ecosystem or the emergence of Delphinidae.

SUBMITTER: Cassens I 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC17202 | biostudies-literature | 2000 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Independent adaptation to riverine habitats allowed survival of ancient cetacean lineages.

Cassens I I   Vicario S S   Waddell V G VG   Balchowsky H H   Van Belle D D   Ding W W   Fan C C   Mohan R S RS   Simões-Lopes P C PC   Bastida R R   Meyer A A   Stanhope M J MJ   Milinkovitch M C MC  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20001001 21


The four species of "river dolphins" are associated with six separate great river systems on three subcontinents and have been grouped for more than a century into a single taxon based on their similar appearance. However, several morphologists recently questioned the monophyly of that group. By using phylogenetic analyses of nucleotide sequences from three mitochondrial and two nuclear genes, we demonstrate with statistical significance that extant river dolphins are not monophyletic and sugges  ...[more]

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