Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith School of Environment, Griffith University, Nathan, QLD 4111, Australia.
Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith School of Environment, Griffith University, Nathan, QLD 4111, Australia.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2018 May;122:157-165. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2018.01.022. Epub 2018 Feb 8.
Spiders of the infraorder Mygalomorphae are fast becoming model organisms for the study of biogeography and speciation. However, these spiders can be difficult to study in the absence of fundamental life history information. In particular, their cryptic nature hinders comprehensive sampling, and linking males with conspecific females can be challenging. Recently discovered differences in burrow entrance architecture and male morphology indicated that these challenges may have impeded our understanding of the trapdoor spider genus Euoplos in Australia's eastern mesic zone. We investigated the evolutionary significance of these discoveries using a multi-locus phylogenetic approach. Our results revealed the existence of a second, previously undocumented, lineage of Euoplos in the eastern mesic zone. This new lineage occurs in sympatry with a lineage previously known from the region, and the two are consistently divergent in their burrow entrance architecture and male morphology, revealing the suitability of these characters for use in phylogenetic studies. Divergent burrow entrance architecture and observed differences in microhabitat preferences are suggested to facilitate sympatry and syntopy between the lineages. Finally, by investigating male morphology and plotting it onto the phylogeny, we revealed that the majority of Euoplos species remain undescribed, and that males of an unnamed species from the newly discovered lineage had historically been linked, erroneously, to a described species from the opposite lineage. This paper clarifies the evolutionary relationships underlying life history diversity in the Euoplos of eastern Australia, and provides a foundation for urgently needed taxonomic revision of this genus.
后纺亚目蜘蛛正迅速成为生物地理学和物种形成研究的模式生物。然而,如果缺乏基本的生活史信息,这些蜘蛛可能很难研究。特别是,它们的隐匿性阻碍了全面采样,而将雄性与同种雌性联系起来也具有挑战性。最近发现的洞穴入口结构和雄性形态的差异表明,这些挑战可能阻碍了我们对澳大利亚东部湿润区陷阱蛛属 Euoplos 的理解。我们使用多基因座系统发育方法研究了这些发现的进化意义。我们的研究结果揭示了在东部湿润区存在第二个以前未被记录的 Euoplos 谱系。这个新的谱系与以前在该地区发现的谱系共存,而且它们在洞穴入口结构和雄性形态上始终存在分歧,表明这些特征适合用于系统发育研究。分歧的洞穴入口结构和观察到的微生境偏好差异被认为有助于谱系之间的同域和同域共存。最后,通过研究雄性形态并将其绘制在系统发育树上,我们揭示了大多数 Euoplos 物种仍然未被描述,而且来自新发现谱系的未命名物种的雄性曾被错误地与来自相反谱系的已描述物种联系在一起。本文阐明了澳大利亚东部 Euoplos 生活史多样性的进化关系,并为该属急需的分类修订提供了基础。