Abstract

Hitherto, the phylogeny of ciliated protists, an important group of model organisms in many fields, has been mainly based on a single marker gene (SSU rDNA, nuclear small subunit ribosomal RNA gene). However, there is increasing evidence showing this is insufficient to provide robust phylogenies and has resulted in confusing systematics in many ciliates groups. Among these, the phylogenies within family Deviatidae (Spirotrichea, Hypotrichia) are ambiguous due to the dependence on SSU rDNA and undersampling. Here, we provide eight new sequences and conduct phylogenetic analyses based on both multi-gene and single-gene to clarify evolutionary relationships among all deviatids for which gene sequence are available. The results reveal that: (1) the monophyly of Deviatidae is well-supported by both single-gene and concatenated data; (2) the presence of fine cirri and relatively wide spacing of these cirri within all rows are plesiomorphies of Deviatidae; (3) Pseudosincirra longicirrata is closely related to Deviata rositae, which is supported by their shared possession of dorsomarginal kineties; (4) phylogenetic analyses and approximately unbiased test based on multi-gene support a close relationship among taxa lacking dorsomarginal kineties (D. parabacilliformis, D. multilineae nov. spec., D. abbrevescens, D. brasiliensis and Perisincirra paucicirrata); (5) Deviatidae shows a close relationship with Dorsomarginalia and Strongylidium-Hemiamphisiella-Pseudouroleptus assemblage, suggesting the presence/absence of dorsomarginal kineties is phylogenetically informative in this family and presence of them may be a plesiomorphy. Based on the morphological, morphogenetic and phylogenetic data, the evolutionary relationships within Deviatidae are hypothesized, and a new ciliate, Deviata multilineae nov. spec., collected from China, is investigated.

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