Abstract

Recent studies indicate that morphologically cryptic species may be ecologically more different than would be predicted from their morphological similarity and phylogenetic relatedness. However, in biodiversity research it often remains unclear whether cryptic species should be treated as ecologically equivalent, or whether detected differences have ecological significance. In this study, we assessed the ecological equivalence of four morphologically cryptic species of the amphipod genus Niphargus. All species live in a small, isolated area on the Istrian Peninsula in the NW Balkans. The distributional ranges of the species are partially overlapping and all species are living in springs. We reconstructed their ecological niches using morphological traits related to feeding, bioclimatic niche envelope and species’ preference for epi-hypogean habitats. The ecological meaning of differences in niches was evaluated using distributional data and co-occurrence frequencies. We show that the species comprise two pairs of sister species. All species differ from each other and the degree of differentiation is not related to phylogenetic relatedness. Moreover, low co-occurrence frequencies in sympatric zones imply present or past interspecific competition. This pattern suggests that species are not differentiated enough to reduce interspecific competition, nor ecologically equivalent to co-exist via neutral dynamics. We tentatively conclude that the question of ecological equivalence relates to the scale of the study: at a fine scale, species’ differences may influence dynamics in a local community, whereas at the regional level these species likely play roughly similar ecological roles.

Highlights

  • According to recent studies, morphologically cryptic species are a common and widespread phenomenon [1,2], found across all phyla and in different environments [3]

  • We present a case study, in which we explored the extent of ecological differentiation of four morphologically cryptic species belonging to the subterranean amphipod genus Niphargus

  • We show that the studied cryptic species are ecologically differentiated; co-occurrence data suggest that this differentiation is not sufficient to resolve the possible interspecific competition at the local scale

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Summary

Introduction

Morphologically cryptic species are a common and widespread phenomenon [1,2], found across all phyla and in different environments [3]. Their detection has become routine [4,5], a common agreement on how cryptic species should be treated in biodiversity research is still lacking. Our awareness and understanding of morphologically cryptic species may profoundly affect their conservation status and priority setting of endangered species. All these issues are critically related to a question of whether or not morphologically cryptic species are ecologically equivalent. Some studies found evidence for divergence of morphologically cryptic species in aspects of the ecological niche unrelated to morphology [14,15,16]

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