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Allopatry and overlap in a clade of snails from mangroves and mud flats in the I ndo‐ W est P acific and M editerranean ( G astropoda: P otamididae: Cerithideopsilla )
Author(s) -
Ozawa Tomowo,
Yin Wei,
Fu Cuizhang,
Claremont Martine,
Smith Lisa,
Reid David G.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
biological journal of the linnean society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.906
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1095-8312
pISSN - 0024-4066
DOI - 10.1111/bij.12401
Subject(s) - biology , allopatric speciation , ecology , gastropoda , mangrove , genus , biogeography , intertidal zone , population , demography , sociology
Cerithideopsilla is a genus of potamidid snails found in high abundance on sedimentary intertidal flats and beneath mangrove trees on continental shores in the tropical and subtropical I ndo‐ W est P acific region and M editerranean S ea. Taxonomic revisions have recognized four species, but recent molecular studies have hinted at a higher diversity. Here, we analyse 377 individuals sampled from across the known range and use a combination of molecular phylogenetic (mitochondrial COI and 16 S r RNA , and nuclear 28S r RNA genes), statistical (generalized mixed Y ule‐coalescent GMYC method) and morphological (shell form) criteria to delimit 16 species. These form four species groups, corresponding with the traditionally recognized species C. alata , C. ‘djadjariensis ’ (for which the valid name is C. incisa ), C. cingulata and C. conica . Distribution maps were compiled using museum specimens identified by diagnostic shell characters. In combination with the molecular phylogenetic trees, these suggest an allopatric speciation mode, with diversification centred on the E ast A sian coastline and northern A ustralia, and a pronounced gap in the ‘eastern I ndonesian corridor’, an area of low oceanic productivity. There is, however, frequently geographical overlap between sister species and we suggest from several sources of evidence (e.g. presence of C. conica in isolated saline lakes 900 km from the sea) that post‐speciation transport by migratory birds has occurred. Nine of the 16 species occur between the G ulf of T onkin and H ong K ong, so southern C hina is significant for both the evolution and conservation of Cerithideopsilla species. © 2014 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society , 2014, 114 , 212–228.

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