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Mitochondrial DNA Sequencing Reveals Extreme Genetic Differentiation in a Cryptic Species Complex of Neotropical Pseudoscorpions

✍ Scribed by Thomas P. Wilcox; Lori Hugg; Jeanne A. Zeh; David W. Zeh


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
224 KB
Volume
7
Category
Article
ISSN
1055-7903

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✦ Synopsis


The neotropical pseudoscorpion Cordylochernes scorpioides (Chernetidae: Lamprochernetinae) is currently described as a single species ranging from Central America to northern Argentina. However, interpopulation crosses have recently demonstrated that C. scorpioides actually represents a complex of cryptic species. Here we present mitochondrial COI gene sequence data from C. scorpioides individuals from Panama, Trinidad, and French Guiana which demonstrate little or no intrapopulation variability but divergence ranging from 2.6 to 13.8% between geographic populations. Phylogenetic analysis provides evidence of a major split between C. scorpioides lineages from Central and South America. Levels of interpopulation mtDNA divergence correspond well with previously established patterns of postzygotic reproductive incompatibility between geographically distinct units within the C. scorpioides complex. By contrast, multivariate morphometric analysis demonstrates that extensive sequence divergence has occurred in the absence of appreciable morphological differentiation between the populations. To provide a framework for assessing the scale of geographic divergence in C. scorpioides, Cordylochernes sequences were compared with homologous sequence from its presumed sister taxon, Lustrochernes, and from Parachernes and Semeiochernes, representatives of the second chernetid subfamily, the Chernetinae. Our preliminary, generic-level analysis suggests that COI sequence data may prove useful in resolving relationships within this problematic family.