Abstract

SUMMARY 1. Biological invasions often involve close taxonomic relatives either as native/invader pairs or as invader/invader pairs. Precise identification and differentiation of species is therefore of paramount importance to reconstruct the invasion history. Genetic studies are indispensable in the case of morphologically conservative taxonomic groups.2. We analysed the Pontocaspian freshwater amphipods Dikerogammarus that have successfully invaded the benthos of large Central European rivers. Taxonomic uncertainties were clarified by phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial 16S and COI genes. The three‐way partitioning of allozyme genotypes in a syntopic population further corroborated the taxonomic status of the three species Dikerogammarus haemobaphes, D. villosus and D. bispinosus. Dikerogammarus bispinosus had been prior misidentified as a subspecies of D. villosus. The conspicuous colour types of D. villosus, however, appeared to be conspecific.3. The genetic identification of the previously more abundant D. haemobaphes individuals in old samples supported the ‘successive invasion wave’ hypothesis with D. haemobaphes as the first invader displaced by the second invader D. villosus. Dikerogammarus bispinosus could be a potential future invader.4. Haplotype differentiation was apparent between two invasion lines of D. haemobaphes, but the occurrence of a single widespread haplotype indicates genetic impoverishment during rapid colonisation.

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