Fig. 4. A in Positive association between PTN polymorphisms and schizophrenia in Northeast Chinese Han population.
Author
Shih, Hsi-Te
Department of Life Science and Research Center for Global Change Biology, National Chung Hsing University, 250, Kuo Kuang Road,
Author
Cai, Yixiong
National Biodiversity Centre, National Parks Board, 1 Cluny Road, Singapore 259569, Republic of Singapore.
Author
Niwa, Nobuaki
Faculty of Science, Kyoto University, Kitashirakawa, Oiwake-cho, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606 - 8502, Japan
Author
Yoshigou, Hidenori
Chugai Technos Co. LTD, 9 - 12, Yokogawa-shin-machi, Nishi-ku, Hiroshima City 733 - 0013, Japan. E-mail: h. yoshigo @ chugai-tec. co. jp (Yoshigou)
h.yoshigo@chugai-tec.co.jp
Author
Nakahara, Yasuhiko
SEIBU Environmental Research Co., LTD, Mikawachishin-machi, Sasebo-City, Nagasaki 859 - 3153, Japan. E-mail: caridina @ nifty. com (Nakahara)
caridina@nifty.com
text
Zoological Studies
2024
2024-07-09
63
18
141
149
http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12829245
journal article
10.6620/ZS.2024.63-18
1810-522X
12831342
Neocaridina ikiensis
Shih, Cai, Niwa & Nakahara, 2017
Specimens examined
: See
Shih et al. (2017)
.
Native distribution
: This species is only distributed in Iki Island,
Nagasaki Prefecture
, western
Japan
(
Shih et al. 2017
).
Remarks
: This species was the second native species of
Neocaridina
discovered in the main islands of
Japan
; and its distribution is restricted to Iki Island, an offshore island in northern Kyushu (
Shih et al. 2017
).
Fuke et al. (2021)
questioned the validity of
N. ikiensis
, commenting that
Shih et al. (2017)
may not have adequately considered the genetic and morphological variations between their new species and the populations of
N. denticulata
in nearby regions, including what they referred to as “
N. denticulata
” from Fukue-jima Island, Goto,
Nagasaki
; Ishiki River, Kawatana,
Nagasaki
; Kuro River, Aso, Kumamota; and Machida R., Kokoneo,
Oita
. Their
COI
tree showed that
N. ikiensis
clustered together with several populations of their “
N. denticulata
”. By re-analyzing their sequences using longer lengths (
Table 3
), along with ours, the results (
Fig. 3
) indicate that
N. ikiensis
forms a sister clade with the Machida population. The samples collected from Kuro River and Ishiki River form one clade, which is sister to a clade composed of samples from the Goto Islands. The supported values of these two clades suggest that each clade may represent a separate species not previously recognized, here assigned as
N.
sp. 1 and
N
. sp. 2, from the Kuro/Ishiki River and from the Goto Islands, respectively. These two clades are distinctly differentiated from the taxa
N. denticulata
and
N
. aff.
denticulata
that our study recognizes based on both genetic and morphological data (cf.
Fig. 3
).
The group formed by
N
. sp. 1,
N
. sp. 2, and
N
. aff.
fukiensis
is sister to another group comprising
N. ikiensis
and the previously mentioned Machida population (
Fig. 3
).
Neocaridina
aff.
fukiensis
is morphologically very distinct from
N. denticulata
(see Remarks under
N
. aff.
fukiensis
), and the Machida specimens may represent another separate species, named here as
N.
sp. 3, that is genetically similar to
N. ikiensis
.
Since
Fuke et al. (2021)
did not provide morphological characters for the species they identified, we cannot compare these three potential unknown species to any of the known ones.