Abstract

Accurate species description in the marine environment is critical for estimating biodiversity and identifying genetically distinct stocks. Analysis of molecular data can potentially improve species delimitations because they are easily generated and independent, and yield consistent results with high statistical power. We used classical phylogenetic (maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference) and coalescent-based methods (divergence dating with fossil calibrations and coalescent-based species delimitation) to resolve the phylogeny of the spiny lobster Panulirus homarus subspecies complex in the Indo-West Pacific. Analyses of mitochondrial data and combined nuclear and mitochondrial data recovered Panulirus homarus homarus and Panulirus homarus rubellus as separately evolving lineages, while the nuclear data trees were unresolved. Divergence dating analysis also identified Panulirus homarus homarus and Panulirus homarus rubellus as two distinct clades which diverged from a common ancestor during the Oligocene, approximately 26 million years ago. Species delimitation using coalescent-based methods corroborated these findings. A long pelagic larval life stage and the influence of ocean currents on post-larval settlement patterns suggest that a parapatric mode of speciation drives evolution in this subspecies complex. In combination, the results indicate that Panulirus homarus rubellus from the Southwest Indian Ocean is a separately evolving lineage and possibly a separate species.

Highlights

  • What constitutes a species or subspecies? In light of conflicting hypotheses regarding species concepts, this is a difficult question to answer

  • Our study extends the work done by Lavery et al (2014) on Panulirus homarus by analyzing a concatenated multi-marker dataset, and using additional coalescent-based methods and fossil data to better understand the evolution of the subspecies complex

  • This study incorporated evidence from molecular, morphology and fossil information to explore the phylogeny of the Panulirus homarus subspecies complex throughout the Indo-West Pacific

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Summary

Introduction

In light of conflicting hypotheses regarding species concepts, this is a difficult question to answer. Whereas all species concepts accept that a species is a separately evolving metapopulation lineage (Agapow et al, 2004; de Queiroz, 2007), secondary criteria differ. How to cite this article Singh et al (2017), A molecular phylogeny of the spiny lobster Panulirus homarus highlights a separately evolving lineage from the Southwest Indian Ocean. All the secondary characteristics that define lineage diversification don’t necessarily occur at the same time or linearly (de Queiroz, 2007), and as a result, organisms might be classified as a subspecies when they are a recently diverged species (Parkin & Knox, 2010). Subspecies are valuable to the studies of biodiversity and evolution, as they reflect the earliest stages of speciation (Johnsen et al, 2006)

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