Evidence for three major clades within the snapping shrimp genus Alpheus inferred from nuclear and mitochondrial gene sequence data

Publication Type:Journal Article
Year of Publication:2001
Authors:S. T. Williams, Knowlton, N., Weigt, L. A., Jara, J. A.
Journal:Molecular Phylogenetics & Evolution
Volume:20
Pagination:375-389
Date Published:September
Keywords:Alpheus [snapping shrimp] (Malacostraca), Alpheus sp. (Malacostraca), Animalia, animals, Arthropoda, Arthropods, clades, claw: morphology, Coenzymes [10802], Comparative and Experimental Morphology, Crustaceans, Enzymes/General and Comparative Studies, Evolution [01500], Evolution and Adaptation, General and Systematic Zoology/Arthropoda-Crustacea [63554], General Biology/Taxonomy, Genetics and Cytogenetics/Animal [03506], Genetics and Cytogenetics/General [03502], glucose-6-phosphate isomerase [EC 5.3.1.9], Invertebrata, Invertebrates, Malacostraca [75112], Malacostraca: Crustacea, mitochondrial gene: sequence data, molecular evolution: rates, Molecular Genetics (Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics), Nomenclature and Terminology [00504], nuclear gene: sequence data, phylogenetic relationships, Physiology and Pathology/Arthropoda-Crustacea [64054], Systematics and Taxonomy, Thunor (Malacostraca)
Abstract:

The snapping shrimp genus Alpheus is among the most diverse of caridean shrimps, and analyses of taxa separated by the Isthmus of Panama have been used to estimate rates of molecular evolution. Although seven morphological groups have been informally suggested, no formal phylogenetic analysis of the genus has been previously attempted. Here we infer the phylogenetic relationships within Alpheus using sequence data from two nuclear genes, glucose-6-phosphate isomerase and elongation factor-1alpha, and from the mitochondrial gene cytochrome oxidase I. Three major clades corresponding to previously noted morphological features were identified. Discrepancies between earlier informal morphological groupings and molecular analyses largely consisted of species whose morphologies were not entirely typical of the group to which they had been assigned. The traditional placements of shrimp with highly sessile lifestyles and consequently simplified morphologies were also not supported by molecular analyses. Phylogenies for Alpheus suggest that specialized ecological requirements (e.g., symbiotic associations and estuarine habitats) and modified claw morphologies have evolved independently several times. These new analyses also support the sister species status of transisthmian pairs analyzed previously, although very similar pairs were not always resolved with the more slowly evolving nuclear loci. In addition, six new cryptic species were identified in the course of these studies plus a seventh whose status remains to be determined.

Taxonomic name: 
Alpheus bouvieri A. Milne-Edwards, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus arenensis (Chace, 1937) (Taxonomy), Alpheus colombiensis Wicksten, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus antepaenultimus Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus galapegensis Silversten, 1933 (Taxonomy), Alpheus latus Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus umbo Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus tenuis Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus hebes Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus rostratus Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus sulcatus Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus panamensis Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus websteri Kingsley, 1880 (Taxonomy), Alpheus paracrinitus Miers, 1881 (Taxonomy), Alpheus normanni Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus lottini Guérin-Méneville, 1829 (Taxonomy), Alpheus floridanus Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus cylindricus Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus cristulifrons M. J. Rathbun, 1900 (Taxonomy), Alpheus millsae Anker, Hurt, and Knowlton 2007 (Taxonomy), Alpheus nuttingi (Schmitt, 1924) (Taxonomy), Alpheus paraformosus Anker, Hurt, and Knowlton 2008 (Taxonomy), Alpheus utriensis Ramos and Von Prahl (Taxonomy), Alpheus simus (Guérin-Méneville, 1855) (Taxonomy), Alpheus estuariensis Christoffersen, 1984 (Taxonomy), Alpheus schmitti Chace, 1972 (Taxonomy), Alpheus viridari (Armstrong, 1949) (Taxonomy), Alpheus peasei (Armstrong, 1940) (Taxonomy), Alpheus candei Guérin-Méneville, 1855 (Taxonomy), Alpheus amblyonyx Chace, 1972 (Taxonomy), Alpheus amblyonyx Chace, 1972 (Taxonomy), Alpheus antepaenultimus Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus arenensis (Chace, 1937) (Taxonomy), Alpheus bouvieri A. Milne-Edwards, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus candei Guérin-Méneville, 1855 (Taxonomy), Alpheus colombiensis Wicksten, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus cristulifrons M. J. Rathbun, 1900 (Taxonomy), Alpheus cylindricus Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus estuariensis Christoffersen, 1984 (Taxonomy), Alpheus floridanus Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus galapegensis Silversten, 1933 (Taxonomy), Alpheus hebes Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus latus Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus lottini Guérin-Méneville, 1829 (Taxonomy), Alpheus millsae Anker, Hurt, and Knowlton 2007 (Taxonomy), Alpheus normanni Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus nuttingi (Schmitt, 1924) (Taxonomy), Alpheus panamensis Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus paracrinitus Miers, 1881 (Taxonomy), Alpheus paraformosus Anker, Hurt, and Knowlton 2008 (Taxonomy), Alpheus peasei (Armstrong, 1940) (Taxonomy), Alpheus rostratus Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus schmitti Chace, 1972 (Taxonomy), Alpheus simus (Guérin-Méneville, 1855) (Taxonomy), Alpheus sulcatus Kingsley, 1878 (Taxonomy), Alpheus tenuis Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus umbo Kim and Abele, 1988 (Taxonomy), Alpheus utriensis Ramos and Von Prahl (Taxonomy), Alpheus viridari (Armstrong, 1949) (Taxonomy), Alpheus websteri Kingsley, 1880 (Taxonomy)
Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith