Abstract

Taxon sampling in most phylogenomic studies is often based on known taxa and/or morphospecies, thus ignoring undescribed diversity and/or cryptic lineages. The family Turridae is a group of venomous snails within the hyperdiverse superfamily Conoidea that includes many undescribed and cryptic species. Therefore ‘traditional’ taxon sampling could constitute a strong risk of undersampling or oversampling Turridae lineages. To minimize potential biases, we establish a robust sampling strategy, from species delimitation to phylogenomics. More than 3,000 cox-1 “barcode” sequences were used to propose 201 primary species hypotheses, nearly half of them corresponding to species potentially new to science, including several cryptic species. A 110-taxa exon-capture tree, including species representatives of the diversity uncovered with the cox-1 dataset, was build using up to 4,178 loci. Our results show the polyphyly of the genus Gemmula, that is split into up to 10 separate lineages, of which half would not have been detected if the sampling strategy was based only on described species. Our results strongly suggest that the use of blind, exploratory and intensive barcode sampling is necessary to avoid sampling biases in phylogenomic studies.

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