Abstract The mutualism between clownfishes (or anemonefishes) and their giant host sea anemones are among the most immediately recognizable animal interactions on the planet and have attracted a great deal of popular and scientific attention [1-5]. However, our evolutionary understanding of this iconic symbiosis comes almost entirely from studies on clownfishes— a charismatic group of 28 described species in the genusAmphiprion[2]. Adaptation to venomous sea anemones (Anthozoa: Actiniaria) provided clownfishes with novel habitat space, ultimately triggering the adaptive radiation of the group [2]. Clownfishes diverged from their free-living ancestors 25-30 MYA with their adaptive radiation to sea anemones dating to 13.2 MYA [2, 3]. Far from being mere habitat space, the host sea anemones also receive substantial benefits from hosting clownfishes, making the mutualistic and co-dependent nature of the symbiosis well established [4, 5]. Yet the evolutionary consequences of mutualism with clownfishes have remained a mystery from the host perspective. Here we use bait-capture sequencing to fully resolve the evolutionary relationships among the 10 nominal species of clownfish-hosting sea anemones for the first time (Figure 1). Using time-calibrated divergence dating analyses we calculate divergence times of less than 25 MYA for each host species, with 9 of 10 host species having divergence times within the last 13 MYA (Figure 1). The clownfish-hosting sea anemones thus diversified coincidently with clownfishes, potentially facilitating the clownfish adaptive radiation, and providing the first strong evidence for co-evolutionary patterns in this iconic partnership. 
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                    This content will become publicly available on November 15, 2025
                            
                            The first de novo HiFi genome assemblies for three clownfish-hosting sea anemone species (Anthozoa: Actiniaria)
                        
                    
    
            Abstract The symbiosis between clownfish and giant tropical sea anemones (Order Actiniaria) is one of the most iconic on the planet. Distributed on tropical reefs, 28 species of clownfishes form obligate mutualistic relationships with 10 nominal species of venomous sea anemones. Our understanding of the symbiosis is limited by the fact that most research has been focused on the clownfishes. Chromosome scale reference genomes are available for all clownfish species, yet there are no published reference genomes for the host sea anemones. Recent studies have shown that the clownfish-hosting sea anemones belong to three distinct clades of sea anemones that have evolved symbiosis with clownfishes independently. Here we present the first high quality long read assemblies for three species of clownfish hosting sea anemones belonging to each of these clades:Entacmaea quadricolor, Stichodactyla haddoni, Radianthus doreensis. PacBio HiFi sequencing yielded 1,597,562, 3,101,773, and 1,918,148 million reads forE. quadricolor, S. haddoni, andR. doreensis, respectively. All three assemblies were highly contiguous and complete with N50 values above 4Mb and BUSCO completeness above 95% on the Metazoa dataset. Genome structural annotation with BRAKER3 predicted 20,454, 18,948 and 17,056 protein coding genes inE. quadricolor, S. haddoniandR. doreeensisgenome, respectively. These new resources will form the basis of comparative genomic analyses that will allow us to deepen our understanding of this mutualism from the host perspective. SignificanceChromosome-scale genomes are available for all 28 clownfish species yet there are no high-quality reference genomes published for the clownfish-hosting sea anemones. The lack of genomic resources impedes our ability to understand evolution of this iconic symbiosis from the host perspective. The clownfish-hosting sea anemones belong to three clades of sea anemones that have evolved mutualism with clownfish independently. Here we assembled the first high-quality long-read genomes for three species of host sea anemones each belonging to a different host clade:Entacmaea quadricolor, Stichodactyla haddoni, Radianthus doreensis. These resources will enable in depth comparative genomics of clownfish-hosting sea anemones providing a critical perspective for understanding how the symbiosis has evolved. Finally, these reference genomes present a significant increase in the number of high-quality long-read genome assemblies for sea anemones (11 currently published) and double the number of high-quality reference genomes for the sea anemone superfamily Actinoidea. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 2205567
- PAR ID:
- 10575799
- Publisher / Repository:
- bioRxiv
- Date Published:
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Institution:
- bioRxiv
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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