Published November 25, 2014 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Molecular perspective on the American transisthmian species of Macrobrachium (Caridea, Palaemonidae)

  • 1. 2Laboratory of Bioecology and Crustacean Systematics, Faculty of Philosophy, Sciences and Letters at Ribeirão Preto (FFCLRP), University of São Paulo , Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo, Brazil
  • 2. University of São Paulo - FFCLRP, Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo, Brazil
  • 3. Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro de Montes de Oca, Costa Rica
  • 4. University of Sao Paulo (USP), Ribeirão Preto - São Paulo, Brazil

Description

The closure of the Isthmus of Panama (about 3.1 million years ago) separated previously continuous populations and created two groups of extant species, which live now in the Pacific and Atlantic drainage systems. This relatively recent event was a trigger to diversification of various species in the Neotropics, nonetheless there are exemplars that do not show sufficient morphologic variability to separate them by traditional morphological tools. About 60 years ago, some freshwater decapod species with high morphological similarity were separate by previous researchers, based on geographical distribution, in Pacific and Atlantic and considered as "sister species". However, the complete isolation of these prawns by this geographical barrier is questionable, and it has generated doubts about the status of the following transisthmian pairs of sibling species: Macrobrachium occidentale × M. heterochirus, M. americanum × M. carcinus, M. digueti × M. olfersii, M. hancocki × M. crenulatum, M. tenellum × M. acanthurus and M. panamense × M. amazonicum. Here we evaluated the relation among these pairs of sibling species in a molecular phylogenetic context. We generated 95 new sequences: 26 sequences of 16S rDNA, 25 of COI mtDNA and 44 of 18S nDNA. In total, 181 sequences were analyzed by maximum likelihood phylogenetic method, including 12 Macrobrachium transisthmian species, as well as seven other American Macrobrachium species, and two other palaemonids. Our analysis corroborated the morphological proximity of the sibling species. Despite the high degree of morphological similarities and considerable genetic diversification encountered among the transisthmian sister species, our data support the conclusion that all species included in sibling groups studied herein are valid taxonomic entities, but not all pairs of siblings form natural groups.

Files

ZK_article_4254.pdf

Files (816.9 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:b0ed1fc97b2f3bc830c03872addfca9a
570.7 kB Preview Download
md5:c360be77d9f5759a3af91a167b1f89d5
246.2 kB Preview Download

Linked records