Frontiers of Evolutionary Zoology Research Group, Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, 0562 Oslo, Norway.
Zoology and Developmental Biology, Department of Biology and Chemistry, University of Osnabrück, Barbarastr. 11, 49069 Osnabrück, Germany.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2020 Feb;143:106663. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2019.106663. Epub 2019 Oct 25.
The recognition of cryptic species concealed in traditionally established species may reveal new biogeographical patterns and alter the understanding of how biodiversity is geographically distributed. This is particularly relevant for marine ecosystems where the incidence of cryptic species is high and where species distribution data are often challenging to collect and interpret. Here, we studied specimens of the 'cosmopolitan' interstitial meiofaunal annelid Stygocapitella subterranea Knöllner, 1934 (Parergodrilidae, Orbiniida), obtaining data from four coastlines in the Northern hemisphere. Using phylogenetic tools and several species-delimitation methods (haplotype networks, GMYC, bPTP, maximum likelihood, posterior probability and morphology) we describe eight new Stygocapitella species. With one exception, all species are present along a single coastline, ultimately challenging the idea that Stygocapitella subterranea has a cosmopolitan distribution. We found evidence for several oceanic transitions having occurred in the past as well as a recent translocation, potentially due to human activity. No diagnostic characters were found, and qualitative and quantitative morphological data do not allow an unequivocal differentiation of the identified cryptic species. This suggests that (i) neither traditional diagnostic features nor quantitative morphology suffice to recognise species boundaries in cryptic species complexes, such as the Stygocapitella species complex; and that (ii) the recognition and description of cryptic species is of seminal importance for biodiversity assessments, biogeography and evolutionary biology.
隐匿种的识别可能揭示新的生物地理格局,并改变人们对生物多样性地理分布的理解。这对于海洋生态系统尤为重要,因为隐匿种的发生率很高,而且物种分布数据通常难以收集和解释。在这里,我们研究了“世界性”间隙小型环节动物 Stygo capitella subterranea Knöllner, 1934(Parergodrilidae,Orbiniida)的标本,这些标本来自北半球的四条海岸线。我们使用系统发育工具和几种物种界定方法(单倍型网络、GMYC、bPTP、最大似然法、后验概率和形态学)描述了 8 个新的 Stygo capitella 物种。除了一个例外,所有的物种都存在于单一的海岸线,这最终挑战了 Stygo capitella subterranea 具有世界性分布的观点。我们发现了过去发生的几次海洋过渡以及最近的一次转移的证据,这可能是由于人类活动造成的。没有发现诊断特征,定性和定量形态数据也不能明确区分已识别的隐匿种。这表明:(i)传统的诊断特征和定量形态都不足以识别隐匿种复合体(如 Stygo capitella 种复合体)中的物种界限;(ii)隐匿种的识别和描述对于生物多样性评估、生物地理学和进化生物学至关重要。