Abstract

Abstract The amphipod family Podosiridae is unusual in that it combines morphological elements of the disparate families Podoceridae and Eusiridae. Here, we describe a new species in the family from specimens collected from the Southern Ocean in the vicinity of the South Orkney Islands and South Shetland Islands. We present mitochondrial (COI and 16S) and nuclear (18S) nucleic acid sequences for this and a congeneric species and use these to investigate the phylogenetic placement of Podosiridae within the Amphipoda. Our results do not provide evidence for a close relationship between Podosiridae and Podoceridae or Eusiridae, suggesting that the superficial similarity between these families is the result of morphological convergence. Instead, it is likely that Podosiridae are more closely related to families within Amphilochidira, such as Stenothoidae. Definitive placement of Podosiridae in the Amphipoda awaits further specimen collection, additional nucleotide data (including sequences from the Hyperiopsidae and the Vitjazianidae) and a more directed analysis of relationships within this portion of the amphipod phylogeny.

Highlights

  • We present mitochondrial (COI and 16S) and nuclear (18S) nucleic acid sequences for this and a congeneric species and use these to investigate the phylogenetic placement of Podosiridae within the Amphipoda

  • We present mitochondrial (COI and 16S) and nuclear (18S) nucleic acid sequences for these specimens and use this information to investigate the phylogenetic placement of the Podosiridae within the Amphipoda

  • Our ability to place Acutocoxae in phylogenetic context within the Amphipoda is somewhat restricted by the low support values for moderately deep nodes in the constructed phylogenies, which is reflected by differences in the phylogenetic results provided by the alternative analysis methods (Figs 3–5)

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Summary

Introduction

The family Podosiridae Lowry & Myers, 2012 is infrequently sampled and is represented by two described species: Podosirus vaderi Bellan-Santini, 2007, collected in 2002 from a hydrothermal vent community at 1680 m water depth in the Azores Triple Junction zone (Bellan-Santini, 2007), and Acutocoxae weddellensis Rauschert, 2017, collected at 694 m water depth in the Weddell Sea, south of Vestkapp (Rauschert, 2017) Owing to their grasping pereopods, large gnathopods and elongate maxillipeds, both species are thought to be ambush predators.

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