Abstract
AbstractResearch of the diversity and evolutionary history of Japanese soil invertebrates is scarce. Molecular data analysis can help to elucidate species classifications and evolutionary processes. We analyzed the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) and nuclear 28S rDNA genes and the morphology of the male pleopod 2 endopod of Ligidium japonicum and its allied species from 67 sites in Hokkaido, Honshu and Shikoku, where only L. japonicum is thought to occur. We found males of the L. japonicum complex with a pleopod 2 endopod morphology matching that of the L. japonicum syntype specimens, except for the number of denticles at the inner margin. There were also more than five species that differed morphologically from the L. japonicum complex, and most of these species had allopatric distributions despite the absence of obvious barriers. A time‐calibrated molecular phylogeny implied that the L. japonicum complex of the Kanto region first differentiated allopatrically in the mountains; this was followed by independent dispersal of three lineages to the Kanto Plain and Boso Peninsula, where secondary contact occurred. Two of the three sympatrically distributed L. japonicum complex lineages had a significant difference in the number of denticles at the inner margin of male pleopod 2 endopods. This variation implies the presence of cryptic species within the L. japonicum complex.
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