Delimiting species within the Lysmata vittata (Stimpson, 1860) (Decapoda: Lysmatidae) species complex in a world full of invaders
Author
Guéron, Rodrigo
Departament of Zoology, Center of Biosciences, Federal University of Pernambuco (UFPE). Avenida Professor Moraes Rêgo. 1235. 50670 - 901 Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil.
Author
Almeida, Alexandre Oliveira
Departament of Zoology, Center of Biosciences, Federal University of Pernambuco (UFPE). Avenida Professor Moraes Rêgo. 1235. 50670 - 901 Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil.
Author
Aguilar, Robert
Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, 647 Contees Wharf Rd., Edgewater, MD 21037, USA
Author
Ogburn, Matthew B.
Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, 647 Contees Wharf Rd., Edgewater, MD 21037, USA
Author
Prakash, Sanjeevi
Centre of Climate Change Studies, Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology, Chennai, India & Sathyabama Marine Research Station, Rameswaram, India
Author
Baeza, J. Antonio
0000-0003-1848-742X
Department of Biological Sciences, 132 Long Hall, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634, USA & Smithsonian Marine Station at Fort Pierce, 701 Seaway Drive, Fort Pierce, FL 34949, USA & Departamento de Biología Marina, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, Universidad Católica del Norte, Larrondo 1281, Coquimbo, Chile Corresponding author. rggueron @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0003 - 1848 - 742 X
rggueron@gmail.com
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-06-07
5150
2
189
216
journal article
68522
10.11646/zootaxa.5150.2.2
7b337d6b-61b0-42f7-81f6-4dd0eb4e3ca1
1175-5326
6621227
F457A107-44E8-4DBC-B4E9-FE8633E26360
Lysmata rauli
is a valid species
Here we formally resurrect
L. rauli
to valid species status, concluding it is not a junior synonym of
L. vittata
as previously suggested by
Soledade
et al.
(2013)
based upon morphological similarity between newly collected Brazilian material and published accounts of
L. vittata
and genetic similarity between Brazilian
L. rauli
and
L. vittata
from
Thailand
(see below). While
Soledade
et al.
(2013)
provided a detailed morphological analysis of material collected in
Brazil
(the type locality for
L. rauli
), there was no corresponding analysis of
L. vittata
from its putative native range. Importantly, their conclusions were also hindered by historical uncertainty regarding accessory branch structure of
L. vittata
. Counter to
Bruce’s (1990)
redescription of
L. vittata
based on a topotypic specimen,
Soledade
et al.
(2013)
stated
L. vittata
possesses a one-segmented accessory branch, similar to Brazilian material identified as
L. rauli
or
L. vittata
. We posit this supposition was based on misidentified material. The present study, as well as
Aguilar
et al.
(2022)
and
Bruce (1990)
, clearly show the
neotype
/topotypic material of
L. vittata
possesses a uniramous accessory branch, in additional to
L. vittata
from
New Zealand
and the
USA
. Further, the genetic analyses presented in
Soledade
et al.
(2013)
were hindered by the lack of material from across the full distribution of
L. vittata
. Much of the strength of
Soledade’s
et al.
(2013)
argument was based on genetic similarity between Brazilian
L. rauli
and
L. vittata
from
Thailand
. However, we posit this
Thailand
material (also included in the present analyses) was not
L. vittata
(clade LV1), but rather
L. rauli
(clade LV4).
In our analyses, which included material from across the western Atlantic, the northern Indo-Pacific, and Oceania, we recovered
L. vittata
(clade LV1) and
L. rauli
(clade LV4) as strongly supported clades (
Fig. 4
). Genetic differences (
p
-distances) between these two clades were considerable (
0.168
–0.194
) and greater than several interspecific cross-clade comparisons within
Lysmata
, e.g.,
L. seticaudata
/
L. debelius
(0.139) and
L argentopunctata
/
L. boggessi
(0.157). Our genetic analyses are supported by
Aguilar
et al.
(2022)
, which recovered
L. vittata
and “
L. vittata
/
rauli
” from
Brazil
in widely divergent and strongly supported clades and delineated both clades as putative species based on ABGD analysis. Given the morphologic uncertainty surrounding
L. vittata
and lack of available data at that time,
Soledade’s
et al.
(2013)
conclusions were not unreasonable and further highlights the urgency of solving the longstanding taxonomic ambiguity of
L. vittata
.
In addition to accessory branch structure, there are other important morphological differences which support the recognition of
L. rauli
as a valid species. The number of meral and carpal segments of the second pereopod (P2) vary widely across
Lysmata
species
and can be useful characteristic in delimitating species (see
Chace, 1997
). On average,
L. rauli
had fewer carpal (16.75 vs. 20.79) and meral (7.36 vs. 10.32) second pereopod segments in comparison to
L. vittata
.
In our PCA and DFA, both aforementioned characters had high loading factors (table 3) in the first principal component, which explained nearly a third of the total variance. Although rostrum length is variable and should be treated with caution,
L. rauli
appear to have a slightly shorter rostrum, reaching the midpoint of the second article of antennular peduncle, as opposed to the distal margin of the same article in
L. vittata
(
Soledade
et al.
2013
;
Aguilar
et al.
2022
). Additionally, coloration patterns are an important and powerful character in distinguishing
Lysmata
species
(Rhyne & Lin 2006;
Rhyne
et al.
2012
;
Baeza & Behringer 2017
), particularly among species that are visually similar, such as between
L. grabhami
and
L. amboinensis
(see fig.
3 in
Baeza 2010
), and
L. intermedia
and
L. jundalini
(
Rhyne
et al.
2012
)
or morphologically similar species (Rhyne & Lin 2006). For example, the cleaner shrimp
L. amboinensis
was originally described as a subspecies of
L. vittata
due to a superficially similar morphologies (from preserved material) but displays an unmistakable live coloration pattern compared to any entity in the wider
L. vittata
species complex.
Lysmata rauli
can be easily distinguished from
L. vittata
by the presence of dark transverse bands at the first and between the third and fourth pleonal segments, further supporting the resurrection of
L. rauli
.