Cryptic species, belonging to the 37 collar-spine Echinostoma
group, were
distinguished using nuclear rDNA ITS (884
bases) and mtDNA CO1 (257 bases) and ND1 (530 bases) sequences. Sequences
were obtained from
five 37 collar-spine species, Echinostoma trivolvis, E. paraensei,
E.
caproni, E. revolutum and E. sp.I, a parthenogenetic
isolate from Africa.
Three geographic isolates of E. caproni were compared. Average
sequence divergence among
the 37 collar-spine species range from 2·2% in the rDNA ITS through
8% for the CO1 and 14%
for the ND1. In addition, genes were sequenced
from 2 non 37 collar-spine species, E. hortense and an undescribed
Australian species,
E. sp. (Aus). For each gene, distances
of terminals from a predicted ancestral sequence were calculated. These
indicated that ND1 is
diverging significantly
faster than the other 2 regions. In the CO1 gene most substitutions are
synonymous and saturation
has been reached for
the majority of pairwise comparisons. The ND1 gene exhibits greater pairwise
divergence but less
evidence of saturation
due to weaker conservation of first and second codon positions. The ITS
has no amino acid
coding constraints and displays
no evidence of saturation. Although all 3 regions successfully distinguished
the nominal
species, ND1 appears to be the
most informative region for investigating relationships within the 37 collar-spine
group.