Abstract

Over the past few decades, modern coral taxonomy, combining morphology and molecular sequence data, has resolved many long-standing questions about scleractinian corals. In this study, we sequenced the complete mitochondrial genomes of three Merulinidae corals (Dipsastraea rotumana, Favites pentagona, and Hydnophora exesa) for the first time using next-generation sequencing. The obtained mitogenome sequences ranged from 16,466 bp (D. rotumana) to 18,006 bp (F. pentagona) in length, and included 13 unique protein-coding genes (PCGs), two transfer RNA genes, and two ribosomal RNA genes . Gene arrangement, nucleotide composition, and nucleotide bias of the three Merulinidae corals were canonically identical to each other and consistent with other scleractinian corals. We performed a Bayesian phylogenetic reconstruction based on 13 protein-coding sequences of 86 Scleractinia species. The results showed that the family Merulinidae was conventionally nested within the robust branch, with H. exesa clustered closely with F. pentagona and D. rotumana clustered closely with Favites abdita. This study provides novel insight into the phylogenetics of species within the family Merulinidae and the evolutionary relationships among different Scleractinia genera.

Highlights

  • Merulinidae (Verrill, 1865) is a clade of corals that belongs to the order Scleractinia and currently comprises 149 species across 24 genera (Huang et al, 2014a; see WoRMS Editorial Board, 2019)

  • As found in other Scleractinia species, all protein-coding genes (PCGs), tRNA, and rRNA genes were encoded on the H-strand

  • The mitochondrial genome of these three corals were identical to most published scleractinian mitogenomes (Van Oppen et al, 2000; Chen et al, 2008; Wang et al, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Merulinidae (Verrill, 1865) is a clade of corals that belongs to the order Scleractinia and currently comprises 149 species across 24 genera (Huang et al, 2014a; see WoRMS Editorial Board, 2019). These species are mainly distributed in the Indo-Pacific and Caribbean regions, but are absent in the eastern Pacific. Pectiniidae and Trachyphylliidae were regarded as junior synonyms of the family Merulinidae (Huang et al, 2011; Budd et al, 2012)

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