Abstract

Many species of the gastropod genus Philine have been named from northeastern Asia but scanty descriptions based predominantly on shells make it difficult to determine which are valid. This, plus the sporadic anatomical and genetic information available for many of these species has led to what may be described as an un-integrated taxonomy. In this situation, it is generally preferable to postpone dissection of rare and unusual specimens until relevant diagnostic characters can be established in broader studies. Micro-CT scanning and DNA sequencing were used to examine such a specimen collected recently from deep waters off northeastern Taiwan. Micro-CT examination of the morphology of the internal shell and gizzard plates suggested that, among named species, the sequenced specimen is most similar to P.otukai. It cannot, however, be definitively referred to P.otukai as that species lacks adequate anatomical description or known DNA sequences. Phylogenetic analyses of newly collected DNA sequences show the specimen to be most closely related to, but distinct from the northern Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean species, Philinequadripartita. The sequences also confirm genetically that five or more species of Philine occur in northeast Asia, including at least three subject to considerable taxonomic uncertainty.

Highlights

  • Accurate delimitation of species of the highly speciose cephalaspidean genus Philine Ascanius, 1772 is hampered by the brief original descriptions of many of its named taxa

  • The difficulty of delimitation is especially marked in northeastern Asia, as exemplified by the situation in Taiwan from which three named Philine species (P. argentata Gould, 1859; P. vitrea Gould, 1859, and P. otukai Habe, 1946) are currently recognised (Lee 1998; Wu 2004; Wu and Lee 2005)

  • The anatomical and genetic information available for most of these species is sporadic, resulting in a taxonomy that may be described as un-integrated, with a general lack of diagnostic characters suitable for species discrimination

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Summary

Introduction

Accurate delimitation of species of the highly speciose cephalaspidean genus Philine Ascanius, 1772 is hampered by the brief original descriptions of many of its named taxa. Many such descriptions were made using only the shell, which has limited diagnostic value, and often these have not been subsequently supplemented by studies of internal anatomy, including morphology of the diagnostically important gizzard plates, or DNA sequences. The anatomical and genetic information available for most of these species is sporadic, resulting in a taxonomy that may be described as un-integrated, with a general lack of diagnostic characters suitable for species discrimination In this situation, we consider it advisable to minimise destructive sampling of rare specimens until such diagnostic characters can be established from more frequently collected taxa

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