Phylogeography of Mytilisepta virgata (Mytilidae: Bivalvia) in the
northwestern Pacific: cryptic mitochondrial lineages and mito-nuclear
discordance
Abstract
The purplish bifurcate mussel Mytilisepta virgata is widely distributed
and represents one of the major components of the intertidal community
in the northwestern Pacific (NWP). Here, we characterized population
genetic structure of NWP populations throughout their whole distribution
range using both mitochondrial (mtDNA cox1) and nuclear (ITS1) markers.
Population genetic analyses for mtDNA cox 1 sequences revealed two
monophyletic lineages (i.e., southern and northern lineages)
geographically distributed according to the two different surface water
temperature zones in the NWP. The timing of the lineage split is
estimated at the Pliocene- mid-Pleistocene (5.49-1.61 Mya), which is
consistent with the timing of the historical isolation of the East
Sea/Sea of Japan from the South and East China Seas caused by sea level
decline during glacial cycles. Historical sea level fluctuation during
the Pliocene-Pleistocene and subsequent adaptation of mussels to
different surface water temperature zones may have contributed to
shaping the contemporary genetic diversity and deep divergence of the
two mitochondrial lineages. Unlike mtDNA sequences, a clear lineage
splitting between the two mitochondrial lineages was not found in ITS1
sequences, showing a star-like structure that is composed of a mixture
of southern and northern mitochondrial lineages. Possible scenarios are
proposed to explain this type of mito-nuclear discordance: stochastic
divergence in the coalescent processes of the two molecular markers, or
balancing selection under different marine environments. Future work is
required to address whether the thermal physiology of these mussels
correlates with the deep divergence of their mitochondrial genes.