Page Timothy J, Humphreys William F, Hughes Jane M
Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University, Nathan, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2008 Feb 20;3(2):e1618. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001618.
We investigated the large and small scale evolutionary relationships of the endemic Western Australian subterranean shrimp genus Stygiocaris (Atyidae) using nuclear and mitochondrial genes. Stygiocaris is part of the unique cave biota of the coastal, anchialine, limestones of the Cape Range and Barrow Island, most of whose nearest evolutionary relations are found in coastal caves of the distant North Atlantic. The dominance of atyids in tropical waters and their food resources suggest they are pivotal in understanding these groundwater ecosystems.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPLE FINDINGS: Our nuclear and mitochondrial analyses all recovered the Mexican cave genus Typhlatya as the sister taxon of Stygiocaris, rather than any of the numerous surface and cave atyids from Australia or the Indo-Pacific region. The two described Stygiocaris species were recovered as monophyletic, and a third, cryptic, species was discovered at a single site, which has very different physiochemical properties from the sites hosting the two described species.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our findings suggest that Stygiocaris and Typhlatya may descend from a common ancestor that lived in the coastal marine habitat of the ancient Tethys Sea, and were subsequently separated by plate tectonic movements. This vicariant process is commonly thought to explain the many disjunct anchialine faunas, but has rarely been demonstrated using phylogenetic techniques. The Cape Range's geological dynamism, which is probably responsible for the speciation of the various Stygiocaris species, has also led to geographic population structure within species. In particular, Stygiocaris lancifera is split into northern and southern groups, which correspond to population splits within other sympatric subterranean taxa.
我们利用核基因和线粒体基因研究了西澳大利亚特有的穴居虾类Stygiocaris属(匙指虾科)的大规模和小规模进化关系。Stygiocaris是独特的洞穴生物群的一部分,该生物群分布于开普山脉和巴罗岛沿海的、半咸淡水的石灰岩洞穴中,其最近的进化关系大多见于遥远的北大西洋的沿海洞穴。匙指虾科在热带水域及其食物资源中占主导地位,这表明它们对于理解这些地下水生态系统至关重要。
方法/主要发现:我们的核基因和线粒体分析均表明,墨西哥洞穴虾属Typhlatya是Stygiocaris的姐妹分类群,而非来自澳大利亚或印度-太平洋地区的众多地表和洞穴匙指虾科物种中的任何一种。已描述的两种Stygiocaris物种被认定为单系类群,并且在一个单一地点发现了第三个隐性物种,该地点的物理化学性质与已知两种Stygiocaris物种所处地点的物理化学性质差异很大。
结论/意义:我们的研究结果表明,Stygiocaris和Typhlatya可能起源于生活在古特提斯海沿海海洋栖息地的一个共同祖先,随后因板块构造运动而分离。人们普遍认为这种替代过程解释了许多分隔的半咸淡水动物群,但很少使用系统发育技术来证明这一点。开普山脉的地质活动可能是导致Stygiocaris各种物种形成的原因,同时也导致了物种内部的地理种群结构。特别是,长刺Stygiocaris分为北部和南部群体,这与其他同域地下分类群中的种群划分相对应。