Published February 11, 2022 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Supplementary materials for the manuscript entitled: Mitochondrial Perspective on Species Identification and Delimitation for troglobitic Cicurina (Arachnida: Araneae: Hahniidae) from Central Texas

  • 1. University of South Florida
  • 2. Sowela Technical Community College
  • 3. Texas Tech University
  • 4. Texas Department of Transportation
  • 5. Zara Environmental LLC*

Description

Central Texas is home to a diverse fauna of endemic species found in the karst areas along the Balcones Fault Line, the Edwards Aquifer region, and associated springs.  The fauna occurring in Bexar County experience especially high anthropogenic pressure due to urban sprawl and suburban development in and around San Antonio, one of the largest cities in the United States.  Among local fauna are numerous troglobitic spider species of the genus Cicurina Menge, 1871 (subgenus Cicurella Chamberlin and Ivie, 1940). Many species of this genus are thought to have small distributions and are often represented in museums and datasets by very few specimens.  Species taxonomy for this group has been defined primarily by differences in the reproductive anatomy of adult females, which are rare in comparison to the number of immature individuals found in the wild.  Prior studies have shown that non-morphologically identifiable immature specimens, in conjunction with adult morphology, aid in illuminating species distributions through incorporation of genetic data.  The phylogenetic assessment of the area's diverse species of Cicurina, which currently includes three federally listed species (C. madla Gertsch, 1992, C. vespera Gertsch, 1992, and C. baronia Gertsch, 1992), can benefit from a statistical framework upon which to test species boundaries and identify priority areas for further investigations.  The species delimitation analyses reported herein provides an updated and expanded understanding of currently recognized species relationships and distributions.  Statistical support was obtained for many recognized species, but hypotheses invalidating some species are also proposed.  In addition, detections of potentially undescribed species only known from genetics of immature specimens are presented.  Finally, significant divergences within federally endangered species were also identified, and priorities for future research are suggested.

Notes

Funding provided by: Texas Department of Transportation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100004932
Award Number: 57-3XXIA003

Files

README.md

Files (354.4 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:7b4d4d97cd8d5a5eed1b985e60c6c609
164.2 kB Download
md5:7b4d4d97cd8d5a5eed1b985e60c6c609
164.2 kB Download
md5:f0dce661e302eeb48e3df8458b859f9b
5.1 kB Download
md5:f0dce661e302eeb48e3df8458b859f9b
5.1 kB Download
md5:6940079204d9af2d1f28fd8525f26953
275 Bytes Preview Download
md5:ad3d2c9e854e58cb1c801976b6a9bff8
1.0 kB Preview Download
md5:4953db5db639889832f0609b60c91cac
14.7 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is source of
10.5281/zenodo.5908014 (DOI)