Abstract

Phylogeography of animals provides clues to processes governing their evolution and diversification. The Indian Ocean has been hypothesized as a ‘dispersal corridor’ connecting hydrothermal vent fauna of Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Stalked barnacles of the family Eolepadidae are common associates of deep-sea vents in Southern, Pacific and Indian oceans, and the family is an ideal group for testing this hypothesis. Here, we describe Neolepas marisindica sp. nov. from the Indian Ocean, distinguished from N. zevinae and N. rapanuii by having a tridentoid mandible in which the second tooth lacks small elongated teeth. Morphological variations suggest that environmental differences result in phenotypic plasticity in the capitulum and scales on the peduncle in eolepadids. We suggest that diagnostic characters in Eolepadidae should be based mainly on more reliable arthropodal characters and DNA barcoding, while the plate arrangement should be used carefully with their intraspecific variation in mind. We show morphologically that Neolepas specimens collected from the South West Indian Ridge, the South East Indian Ridge and the Central Indian Ridge belong to the new species. Molecular phylogeny and fossil evidence indicated that Neolepas migrated from the southern Pacific to the Indian Ocean through the Southern Ocean, providing key evidence against the ‘dispersal corridor’ hypothesis. Exploration of the South East Indian Ridge is urgently required to understand vent biogeography in the Indian Ocean.

Highlights

  • Distribution range and phylogeography of organisms are important basic ecological traits for elucidating their evolutionary history and their successful conservation

  • Hydrothermal activities in the Indian Ocean were first detected on the South East Indian Ridge (SEIR), with vertical profiles of thermometer and nephelometer equipped on dredges and core samplers detecting hydrothermal plumes at ‘site 21’ near the Amsterdam–St Paul Plateau, and the dredge successfully collected a new species of vent-associated barnacle belonging to the genus Neolepas [10]

  • This study aims to characterize and describe this new Neolepas species mainly using material from Central Indian Ridge (CIR) but supported by evidence from South West Indian Ridge (SWIR) and SEIR to consider its distributional range

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Summary

Introduction

Distribution range and phylogeography of organisms are important basic ecological traits for elucidating their evolutionary history and their successful conservation. Hydrothermal activities in the Indian Ocean were first detected on the SEIR, with vertical profiles of thermometer and nephelometer equipped on dredges and core samplers detecting hydrothermal plumes at ‘site 21’ near the Amsterdam–St Paul Plateau, and the dredge successfully collected a new species of vent-associated barnacle belonging to the genus Neolepas [10]. Morphological characteristics of this vent barnacle from the SEIR were given [11,12], but without a name or formal description. The distribution ranges of hydrothermal fauna across the entire Indian Ocean ridge systems, have not been elucidated in its entirety

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