Oeyen Jan Philip, Funke Sebastian, Böhme Wolfgang, Wesener Thomas
Department Arthropoda, Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig, Bonn, Germany.
Department of Ophthalmology, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz, Germany.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 24;9(9):e108650. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0108650. eCollection 2014.
The thermophilous giant centipede Scolopendra cingulata is a voracious terrestrial predator, which uses its modified first leg pair and potent venom to capture prey. The highly variable species is the most common of the genus in Europe, occurring from Portugal in the west to Iran in the east. The northernmost occurrences are in Hungary and Romania, where it abides in small isolated fringe populations. We report the rediscovery of an isolated Austrian population of Scolopendra cingulata with the first explicit specimen records for more than 80 years and provide insights into the evolutionary history of the northernmost populations utilizing fragments of two mitochondrial genes, COI and 16S, comprising 1,155 base pairs. We test the previously proposed hypothesis of a speciation by distance scenario, which argued for a simple range expansion of the species from the southeast, via Romania, Hungary and finally to Austria, based on a comprehensive taxon sampling from seven countries, including the first European mainland samples. We argue that more complex patterns must have shaped the current distribution of S. cingulata and that the Austrian population should be viewed as an important biogeographical relict in a possible microrefugium. The unique haplotype of the Austrian population could constitute an important part of the species genetic diversity and we hope that this discovery will initiate protective measures not only for S. cingulata, but also for its habitat, since microrefugia are likely to host further rare thermophilous species. Furthermore, we take advantage of the unprecedented sampling to provide the first basic insights into the suitability of the COI fragment as a species identifying barcode within the centipede genus Scolopendra.
嗜热大蜈蚣(Scolopendra cingulata)是一种贪婪的陆地捕食者,它利用其特化的第一对步足和强效毒液来捕获猎物。这种高度可变的物种是欧洲该属中最常见的,分布范围从西部的葡萄牙到东部的伊朗。最北的分布区域在匈牙利和罗马尼亚,在那里它以小而孤立的边缘种群形式存在。我们报告了奥地利一个孤立的嗜热大蜈蚣种群的重新发现,并提供了80多年来首个明确的标本记录,利用两个线粒体基因COI和16S的片段(共1155个碱基对),深入了解了最北种群的进化历史。我们基于来自七个国家的全面分类群抽样,包括首个欧洲大陆样本,检验了先前提出的距离隔离物种形成假说,该假说认为该物种从东南部经罗马尼亚、匈牙利最终扩展到奥地利是一个简单的范围扩张过程。我们认为,更复杂的模式必定塑造了嗜热大蜈蚣目前的分布,并且奥地利种群应被视为一个可能的微型避难所中的重要生物地理遗迹。奥地利种群独特的单倍型可能构成该物种遗传多样性的重要组成部分,我们希望这一发现不仅能启动对嗜热大蜈蚣的保护措施,还能保护其栖息地,因为微型避难所可能还栖息着其他稀有的嗜热物种。此外,我们利用这一前所未有的抽样,首次对COI片段作为蜈蚣属(Scolopendra)物种识别条形码的适用性提供了基本见解。