Abstract

species level. - The first mitochondrial DNA phylogeny (based on 17 unique haplotypes) is presented for a number of scorpion populations from Italy, Malta, and Greece, previously classified under the catch-all name Euscorpius carpathicus (Linnaeus, 1767). A comparative analysis of the mitochondrial gene for 16S (large subunit) ribosomal RNA suggests that at least two clearly separated lineages are present. However, neither of these belongs to carpathicus (L.) in a strict sense, which was limited to Romania in a recent morphological study. The first, western lineage, found in northern and central Italy (also present in France, Slovenia, Croatia, and Austria) corresponds to tergestinus (C. L. Koch, 1837) as recently defined by Fet & Soleglad. Another monophyletic, southern lineage is elevated here to the species rank as sicanus (C. L. Koch, 1837). Originally described from Sicily, sicanus includes as new synonyms carpathicus canestrinii (Fanzago, 1872) and six subspecies described by Caporiacco: c. calabriae, c. ilvanus, c. garganicus, c. argentarii, c. palmarolae, and c. linosae. Morphology confirms the existence of two lineages: sicanus is characterized by a unique trichobothrial pattern and number where series eb, and in some populations also series eb a , have 5 trichobothria (all tergestinus possess only four of them). sicanus is found in Italy (including Sicily and Sardinia), northern Africa, Malta, and Greece. The enigmatic E. mesotrichus HadŽi from Greece also belongs to sicanus.

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