Popis: |
Supplementary Figure 1 The currently known distribution of atypical mitochondrial (purple) across Isopoda at the family level. Purple indicates that for all species for which information is available, mitochondrial genomes are atypical in structure, while grey indicates they are typical. Families with purple and grey (in Cymothoidae and Ligiidae) indicate reports of both types of structure within the family. Green indicates that the taxon with the associated mitochondrial structure is terrestrial, red indicates freshwater, and blue indicates marine. This tree reflects the relationships based on Fig. S4 from (Lins et al., 2017), based on the nuclear 18S, 28S and mitochondrial COI genes. This tree was selected based on the wide taxonomic breadth, however recent studies using nuclear markers suggest Tylidae should be placed within the Oniscidea suborder (Becking et al., 2017). This is reflected above using dashed lines to indicate the potential positions of Tylidae. Sphaeromatidae, in bold, includes Isocladus armatus ����� which is the focus of this investigation. The numbers on the right in bold indicate the number of taxa investigated for atypical mitochondrial structure |