Abstract

Copepods have been poorly studied in subterranean habitats in Korea. Previous records have indicated mostly the presence of species already described from Japan, with very few endemic elements. This commonality has usually been explained by repeated dispersal across the land bridges that connected the two countries several times during the Pleistocene glacial cycles. However, the Korean Peninsula is known for pockets of Cambrian and Ordovician carbonate rocks, with more than 1,000 caves already having been explored. The relative isolation of these carbonate pockets makes for an enormous speciation potential, and the development of a high level of short-range endemism of subterranean copepods should be expected. Representatives of the genus Diacyclops Kiefer, 1927 are here investigated from a range of subterranean habitats in South Korea, with comparative material sampled from central Honshu in Japan. Morphological analyses of microcharacters, many of which are used in cyclopoid taxonomy for the first time herein, reveal high diversity in both countries. No subterranean species is found in common, although the existence of four sibling species pairs in Korea and Japan may be indicative of relatively recent speciation. We describe seven new stygobiotic species, including three from Korea (Diacyclops hanguk sp. n., Diacyclops leeae sp. n., and Diacyclops parasuoensis sp. n.) and four from Japan (Diacyclops hisuta sp. n., Diacyclops ishidai sp. n., Diacyclops parahanguk sp. n., and Diacyclops pseudosuoensis sp. n.). Diacyclops hanguk, Diacyclops parasuoensis, Diacyclops ishidai, and Diacyclops parahanguk are described from newly collected material, while the other three new species are proposed for specimens previously identified as other, widely distributed species. Diacyclops brevifurcus Ishida, 2006 is redescribed from the holotype female, and Diacyclops suoensis Ito, 1954 is redescribed from material newly collected near the ancient Lake Biwa in Japan. This research provides evidence for the importance of subterranean habitats as reservoirs of biodiversity, and also demonstrates the inadequacy of current morphological methods of identifying closely related species of copepods. The disproportionately high diversity discovered around Lake Biwa provides further evidence in support of the hypothesis about the role of ancient lakes as biodiversity pumps for subterranean habitats. A key to the East Asian species of the languidoides-group is provided.

Highlights

  • Until recently, freshwater cyclopoids in Korea were studied predominantly in surface water habitats, with 50 species recorded so far (Chang 2009)

  • In the course of a research project aimed at uncovering Korean invertebrate diversity, and led by the National Institute of Biological Resources (NIBR), subterranean waters were sampled throughout South Korea and identification of copepods was entrusted to the senior author

  • Other paratypes from type locality: three females on one scanning electron micrography (SEM) stub (LBM1430005379), two females dissected on one slide each (LBM 1430005380, Lake Biwa Museum (LBM) 1430005381), and one male and four females together in ethanol (LBM 1430005382), all collected 27 September 2009, leg

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Summary

Introduction

Freshwater cyclopoids in Korea were studied predominantly in surface water habitats, with 50 species recorded so far (Chang 2009). Two different and independent research projects were conducted in Japan, with partial goals of exploring the groundwater fauna around Lake Biwa and clarifying the role of ancient lakes in the diversity of the subterranean fauna in their vicinity The latter projects were led by the Lake Biwa Museum (LBM), and identification of copepods was entrusted to the senior author (see Karanovic and Abe 2010). Diacyclops is an ideal group for zoogeographical studies, with different species in surface and subterranean habitats, and some that can exploit both This genus has a long history of taxonomic problems though (Stoch 2001), and it is recognised to be polyphyletic or at least paraphyletic by many researchers (Monchenko and von Vaupel Klein 1999; Monchenko 2000; Karanovic 2005, 2006). Even Kiefer (1927) recognised two distinct groups of species within Diacyclops: one containing D. bicuspidatus (Claus, 1857) [type species], D. bisetosus (Rehberg, 1880), D. crassicaudis (Sars, 1863), and some others; and the other group including species with a higher degree of appendage oligomerization, such as D. languidus (Sars, 1863), D. languidoides (Lilljeborg, 1901), Endemism of subterranean Diacyclops in Korea and Japan, with descriptions

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