Abstract

There are three isolated mountain ranges in Taiwan including Hsueshan Range, Central Mountain Range, and Yushan Range. The rise of these mountains has resulted in the isolation of some species and caused allopatric distribution resulting in divergence and speciation events of high mountain carabids, especially the flightless carabids such as Epaphiopsis, Apenetretus, and partial Nebria. Genus Apenetretus Kurnakov (1960) is typically distributed in high mountain areas of Taiwan. Three of the currently known Apenetretus species have been described from different mountain ranges. These species include Apenetretus yushanensis Habu, Apenetretus nanhutanus Habu, and Apenetretus smetanai Zamotajlov and Sciaky. In this study, a new species is described from Hsueshan, a mountain separated from the ranges of the previous known species, Apenetretus hsueshanensis sp. n. A key to the Taiwanese Apenetretus is included. A reconstructed phylogeny of the Taiwanese Apenetretus is introduced with the use of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene. Molecular data and geographical distribution of Apenetretus support the morphological characteristics observed among those mountain-isolated species and confirms the new species as being distinctly different. Moreover, lineage calibration suggests that the southern Apenetretus yushanensis is the most distant one compared to the other three northern Apenetretus at ca. 1.81 million years ago (mya), while the divergence time of Apenetretus hsueshanensis to its sister group was dated to 0.94 mya.

Highlights

  • In Taiwan, mountain ranges that have become isolated over time have played a major role promoting divergent events of high mountain dwelling carabids, especially in species with flightless adults

  • A. yushanensis and A. nanhutanus were considered as members of Patrobus Dejean, 1821 and Apatrobus was considered a subgenus under Patrobus

  • The three species originally belong to the subgenus Apenetretus in Taiwan were changed into Apenetretus yushanensis, Apenetretus nanhutanus, and Apenetretus smetanai, respectively (Zamotajlov 2002)

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Summary

Introduction

In Taiwan, mountain ranges that have become isolated over time have played a major role promoting divergent events of high mountain dwelling carabids, especially in species with flightless adults. Keywords Apenetretus, Carabidae, Hsueshan, mountain island isolation, new species The genus Apenetretus in Taiwan includes three described species, all of which inhabit alpine areas of different mountain ranges (Habu and Baba 1960; Löbl and Smetana 2003; Terada 2006). Apenetretus yushanensis (Habu, 1973) and A. nanhutanus (Habu, 1973) were first collected and described from Yushan and Nanhudashan, respectively (Habu 1973) (Fig. 1).

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