2000
DOI: 10.1006/mpev.1999.0694
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A New Molecular Phylogenetic Hypothesis for the Evolution of Freshwater Eels

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Cited by 31 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Using dentition as a primary character, Ege (1939) distinguished 2 major lines of angullid speciation and 1 of them arose from A. ancestralis found on Celebes Island, which was later determined by Castle & Williamson (1974) to be A. celebesensis. A recent genetic study on the phylogeny of anguillid eels found that A. marmorata appeared to be the most ancestral of the 8 species examined (Bastrop et al 2000). However, in a more recent study Aoyama et al (2001) analyzed 18 species of anguillid eels, found that A. borneensis from Borneo Island was the most basal species, and proposed that anguillid eels originated near presentday Indonesia and dispersed to both the east and west along paleo-circumglobal equatorial currents.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using dentition as a primary character, Ege (1939) distinguished 2 major lines of angullid speciation and 1 of them arose from A. ancestralis found on Celebes Island, which was later determined by Castle & Williamson (1974) to be A. celebesensis. A recent genetic study on the phylogeny of anguillid eels found that A. marmorata appeared to be the most ancestral of the 8 species examined (Bastrop et al 2000). However, in a more recent study Aoyama et al (2001) analyzed 18 species of anguillid eels, found that A. borneensis from Borneo Island was the most basal species, and proposed that anguillid eels originated near presentday Indonesia and dispersed to both the east and west along paleo-circumglobal equatorial currents.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is also a single record from South Africa (Smith 1989). Anguilliform fossils date back to the Cretaceous about 100 million yr ago (Bastrop et al 2000).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The single genus Anguilla consists of 15 species and three subspecies (Watanabe 2003). The evolutionary history of the Anguillidae and the origins of the current global distribution of species are still in question (Bastrop et al 2000, Aoyama et al 2001, Lin et al 2001. They occur in all temperate and tropical waters except the southern Atlantic and the east coast of the Pacific (Aoyama et al 2001).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This is exemplified by R. anguilla, which is a parasite specific to European freshwater eels. Freshwater eels seem to have originated in the Far East (Bastrop et al, 2000;Tsukamoto et al, 2002) and then dispersed through the Indian Ocean to the rest of Asia and into Europe. Rhabdochona anguilla is not present in Asian eels.…”
Section: Ecological Fitting and Widespread Host Switching Of Rhabdochmentioning
confidence: 99%