Abstract

The 101 species of Mecyclothorax Sharp known to inhabit Tahiti Island, French Polynesia are taxonomically revised, including 28 species that are newly described: Mecyclothorax claridgeiae sp. n., Mecyclothorax jeanyvesi sp. n., Mecyclothorax poria sp. n., Mecyclothorax aano sp. n., Mecyclothorax papau sp. n., Mecyclothorax manina sp. n., Mecyclothorax everardi sp. n., Mecyclothorax ramagei sp. n., Mecyclothorax pitohitiensis sp. n., Mecyclothorax curtisi sp. n., Mecyclothorax hoeahiti sp. n., Mecyclothorax ninamu sp. n., Mecyclothorax kokone sp. n., Mecyclothorax paahonu sp. n., Mecyclothorax kayballae sp. n., Mecyclothorax ehu sp. n., Mecyclothorax papuhiti sp. n., Mecyclothorax tuea sp. n., Mecyclothorax taatitore sp. n., Mecyclothorax konemata sp. n., Mecyclothorax arboricola sp. n., Mecyclothorax rahimata sp. n., M. oaoa sp. n., Mecyclothorax maninapopoti sp. n., Mecyclothorax hunapopoti sp. n., Mecyclothorax fefemata sp. n., Mecyclothorax maninamata sp. n., and Mecyclothorax niho sp. n. Mecyclothorax muriauxioides Perrault, 1984 is newly synonymized with Mecyclothorax muriauxi Perrault, 1978. Lectotypes are designated for: Thriscothorax altiusculus Britton, 1938; Thriscothorax bryobius Britton, 1938; Mecyclothorax globosus Britton, 1948: and Mecyclothorax sabulicola Britton, 1948. Dichotomous identification keys augmented by dorsal habitus and male aedeagal photographs are provided to the various species-groups and all included species. The spermatophore of Mecyclothorax papau sp. n. is described, with the ampulla and collar found to correspond dimensionally to the length of the internal sac flagellar plate. Variation among characters of the female reproductive tract is presented for all newly described plus other representative species comprising the radiation. Taxa are assigned to species groups, modified from the classification of G.G. Perrault, based on derived character states polarized using the Australian outgroup taxon Mecyclothorax punctipennis (MacLeay). Much of the species-level diversity on this small Pacific island is partitioned allopatrically over very small distributional ranges. No species is shared between Tahiti Nui and Tahiti Iti, and nearly all species in Tahiti Nui are geographically restricted to one ridgelike massif of that volcano. Cladistically similar species are often distributed on different massifs suggesting that vicariance associated with erosional valley formation has facilitated speciation, however several instances in which sister species occupy sympatric distributions on the same ridge system demonstrate that speciation may also occur across extremely localized landscapes. Such localized differentiation is facilitated by the low vagility of these small-bodied, flightless predators whose fragmented populations can persist and diverge within spatially limited habitat patches. The intense philopatry of Tahitian Mecyclothorax spp. coupled with the highly dissected landscape has produced the geographically densest adaptive radiation on Earth. This radiation has occurred very rapidly, with species durations averaging 300,000 yr; a speciation rate similar to that observed in Hawaiian Oliarus planthoppers and Laupala crickets, and East African Rift lake cichlid fishes.

Highlights

  • The area of Tahiti Island comprises 1045 km2, yet as is shown by this taxonomic revision, the island supports more than 100 precinctive carabid beetle species in the genus Mecyclothorax Sharp

  • Perrault (1992) concluded that such diversity would have resulted from speciation events brought about by fragmentation of populations in isolated montane habitats that are currently separated by ecologically inhospitable lowland valleys. He observed that closely related allopatric representatives occupied adjacent, isolated massifs (Perrault 1992, table 10.2). He concluded that allopatric speciation occurring in concert with irreversible habitat fragmentation had led to the diversification of Tahitian Mecyclothorax

  • Moving clockwise on the Tahiti Nui volcano (Fig. 1), the only other widespread species are shared between Aorai and the ridge system including Pihaaiateta and Pito Hiti; i.e. M. fosbergioides, M. jarrigei, and again, M. sabulicola

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Summary

Introduction

The area of Tahiti Island comprises 1045 km, yet as is shown by this taxonomic revision, the island supports more than 100 precinctive carabid beetle species in the genus Mecyclothorax Sharp. Perrault (1992) concluded that such diversity would have resulted from speciation events brought about by fragmentation of populations in isolated montane habitats that are currently separated by ecologically inhospitable lowland valleys He observed that closely related allopatric representatives occupied adjacent, isolated massifs (Perrault 1992, table 10.2). All taxonomic studies are held hostage by the relative availability of field-collected specimens, and in this instance, the accrual of taxonomic material from a recent biological survey has resulted in the discovery of numerous undescribed species, in more than several instances from localities never before visited by entomologists The addition of this material has shown that closely related species may occur in habitats that do not appear isolated, one from the other.

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