Abstract

The phylogenetic relationships and taxonomy of the crab spider genus Xysticus and its closest relatives (i.e., the tribe Coriarachnini, also including, e.g., Ozyptila, Coriarachne and Bassaniana) have long been controversial, with several alternative classifications being proposed, none of which has gained universal acceptance. As Coriarachnini is largely confined to the Holarctic region, the main target area of recent DNA barcoding projects for spiders, a large amount of genetic data for the group is now publicly available. The results of a phylogenetic analysis of this sequence dataset are largely congruent with earlier morphology-based results regarding the evolutionary structure of the group. In particular, they highlight the fact that Xysticus s. lat. is a paraphyletic assembly and that several species groups need to be placed in separate genera to achieve monophyly of Xysticus s. str. Similarly, Coriarachne and Bassaniana appear as independent clades rather than a joined monophyletic Coriarachne s. lat. In contrast, further subdivision of Ozyptila is not supported by the genetic data. Importantly, the analysis also shows that anapophysate members of Xysticus s. lat. form two widely separated groups: a primarily anapophysate division, also including Coriarachne and Bassaniana, at the base of Xysticus s. lat., and a secondarily anapophysate clade deeply nested within Xysticus s. str. This might explain some of the earlier difficulties when trying to define generally accepted subgroups within Xysticus s. lat. The phylogenetic scaffold based on barcode sequences is sufficiently dense and well resolved to attempt the tentative and provisional placement of the majority of species in Xysticus s. lat. in the independent genera Xysticus s. str., Bassaniodes, Psammitis and Spiracme as a starting point for a future more formal revision of the group.

Highlights

  • The crab spider genus Xysticus s.lat. and its closest relatives, the genera Ozyptila s. lat. and Coriarachne s.lat., represent a well-defined morphologically homogeneous clade, constituting the core of the tribe Coriarachnini sensu Ono (1988)

  • Anapophysate Xysticus have repeatedly been placed into separategenera, such as Psammitis, Proxysticus, Spiracme or Bassaniodes in various combinations

  • It has been proposed that the genus Ozyptila is possibly not monophyletic and may require subdivision into multiple genera based on present species groups (Lehtinen 2002, Marusik et al 2005)

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Summary

Introduction

The crab spider genus Xysticus s.lat. and its closest relatives, the genera Ozyptila s. lat. and Coriarachne s.lat., represent a well-defined morphologically homogeneous clade, constituting the core of the tribe Coriarachnini sensu Ono (1988). A large number of competing and not always mutually compatible subdivisions of the group have been proposed, either using species groups and subgenera, or raising some parts of the large genera Xysticus and Ozyptila to genus rank (Dondale & Redner 1975, Gertsch 1939, 1953, Jantscher 2001, 2002, Lehtinen 2002, Marusik et al 2005, Ono 1978, 1988, Schick 1965, Turnbull et al 1965, Wunderlich 1987, 1992, 1995).

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