Shell and appendages variability in two allopatric ostracod species seen through the light of molecular data

Author:

Karanovic Ivana12,Huyen Pham Thi Minh1,Yoo Hyunsu3,Nakao Yuriko4,Tsukagoshi Akira5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Life Science, College of Natural Sciences, Hanyang University, Seoul 04763, Republic of Korea

2. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 49, 7001, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, ivana@hanyang.ac.kr

3. Marine Environmental Research and Information Laboratory (MERIL), 17, Gosan-ro, 148 beon-gil, Gunpo-si, Gyoenggi-do, 15180, Republic of Korea

4. Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences, College of Humanities and Sciences, Nihon University, Sakurajousui 3-25-40, Setagayaku, Tokyo, 156-8550, Japan

5. Department of Geoscience, Faculty of Science, Shizuoka University, Ohya 836, Suruga-ku, Shizuoka City, 422-8529 Japan

Abstract

Ostracod crustaceans are among the most abundant microfossil animals. Understanding intra- and interspecific variability of their shell is of pivotal importance for the interpretation of paleontological data. In comparison to appendages, ostracod shell displays more intraspecific variability (in shape, size, and ornamentation), often as a response to environmental conditions. Shell variability has been studied with sophisticated methods, such as geometric morphometrics (GM), but the conspecificity of examined specimens and populations was never tested. In addition, there are no GM studies of appendages. We build on previously published high cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) divergence rates among populations of a brackish water species, Ishizakiella miurensis (Hanai, 1957). With landmark-based GM analyses of its shell and appendages, and additional genetic markers (ITS, 28S, 18S), we test if the genetic variability is structured in morphospace. This approach is the core of integrative taxonomy paradigm which has been proposed to bring the gap between traditional taxonomy and other disciplines such as evolutionary biology. The results show that it is the shell shape, and not the shape of appendages, that mirrors the molecular phylogeny, and we describe a new species. Our results suggest that the landmark-based GM studies may be useful in paleontological datasets for closely related species delineation. We implement molecular clock and population statistics to discuss speciation processes and phylogeography of the two congeners in Korea and Japan.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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