Publication | Open Access
DNA evidence for morphological and cryptic Cenozoic speciations in the Anaspididae, ‘living fossils’ from the Triassic
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Citations
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References
2000
Year
BiologyMorphological EvidenceCryptic Cenozoic SpeciationsSpeciation HistoryPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyLiving FossilNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyMolecular PalaeobiologyPhylogenetic MethodDna EvidenceCryptic SpeciationPhylogenomicsContinuous SpeciationPhylogeny ComparisonPhylogenetic Analysis
Abstract The speciation history of Anaspides tasmaniae (Crustacea: Malacostraca) and its close relatives (family Anaspididae) was studied by phylogenetic and molecular clock analyses of mitochondrial DNA sequences. The phylogenetic analyses revealed that the Anaspides morphotype conceals at least three cryptic species belonging to different parts of its range. The occurrence of multiple cryptic phylogenetic species within one morphological type shows that substantial genetic evolution has occurred independently of morphological evolution. Molecular clock dating of the speciation events that generated both the cryptic and the morphological species of Anaspididae indicated continuous speciation within this group since the Palaeocene ~55 million years ago. This relatively constant rate of recent morphological and cryptic speciation within the Anaspididae suggests that the speciation rate in this group does not correlate with its low extinction rate or morphological conservatism.
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