WoRMS source details

Leiva, Carlos; Riesgo, Ana; Avila, Conxita; Rouse, Greg W.; Taboada, Sergi. (2018). Population structure and phylogenetic relationships of a new shallow-water Antarctic phyllodocid annelid. Zoologica Scripta. 47(6): 714-726, plus informal taxonomic supplement in Word format.
331511
10.1111/zsc.12313 [view]
Leiva, Carlos; Riesgo, Ana; Avila, Conxita; Rouse, Greg W.; Taboada, Sergi
2018
Population structure and phylogenetic relationships of a new shallow-water Antarctic phyllodocid annelid
Zoologica Scripta
47(6): 714-726, plus informal taxonomic supplement in Word format
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb). Online unpublished for nomenclature, no ZooBank registration, on 19 September 2018. In print issue November, 2018
Shallow-water polychaetes are abundant and diverse components of the Southern Ocean benthic communities, and although they have been widely studied, new species that are relatively common are still discovered. Here, we report the discovery of Pterocirrus giribeti sp. n., a new and abundant intertidal and upper-subtidal Antarctic phyllodocid. To establish the phylogenetic relationships of the new species, we sequenced two nuclear (18S and 28S) and two mitochondrial (COI and 16S) markers. Although the phylogenetic relationships obtained for the family Phyllodocidae were not fully resolved, we assigned our new phyllodocid to the genus Pterocirrus based on both its phylogenetic position and its morphological characters. Using COI and 16S sequences of 126 and 118 individuals, respectively, from eight populations across the South Shetland Islands and the Antarctic Peninsula, we also investigated the genetic diversity and gene flow patterns of this new species. Our results suggested that all populations were panmictic, likely due to the presence of planktotrophic larvae allowing long-distance dispersal. Interestingly, some genetic substructure was detected despite panmixis, and we identified a semipermeable barrier coinciding with an oceanic front produced by the intrusion into the Bransfield Strait of a tongue of water from the Weddell Sea. This front produced signatures of differentiation on populations at the tip of the West Antarctic Peninsula. Moreover, our results indicated a recent demographic expansion throughout the sampled area, in agreement with the “glacial refugium” hypothesis stated for other Antarctic shallow-water invertebrates.
Antarctic
Molecular systematics, Molecular biology
Systematics, Taxonomy
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Date
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by
2018-09-21 06:47:14Z
created
2019-12-23 21:17:37Z
changed

 Authority

In the unpublished supplement the authorship is Leiva & Taboada [details]

 Classification

Alciopa (type genus) and related holoplanktonic genera are thought to be part of Phyllodocidae, currently at tribe ... [details]

 Etymology

In the unpublished supplement the species is named after Professor Gonzalo Giribet [details]

 Type locality

In the unpublished supplement the type locality is Cierva Cove, West coast of the Antarctic Peninsula, -64.1556, ... [details]