Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) (Annelida, Clitellata) as a sub-cosmopolitan species: a commonly held view challenged by DNA barcoding

Haplotaxis Hoffmeister, 1843 is a poorly known genus: it is rarely collected because it usually inhabits groundwater, and many species are only known from immature specimens. Even the type species, Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) remains poorly defined because of the absence of refere...

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Published in:Zoosymposia
Main Authors: Martin, Patrick, Knüsel, Mara, Alther, Roman, Altermatt, Florian, Ferrari, Benoît, Vivien, Régis
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Magnolia Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.23.1.10
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spelling fteawag:oai:dora:eawag_31189 2024-09-15T17:47:38+00:00 Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) (Annelida, Clitellata) as a sub-cosmopolitan species: a commonly held view challenged by DNA barcoding Martin, Patrick Knüsel, Mara Alther, Roman Altermatt, Florian Ferrari, Benoît Vivien, Régis 2023 https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.23.1.10 eng eng Magnolia Press Zoosymposia--Zoosymposia--journals:5518--1178-9905--1178-9913 eawag:31189 doi:10.11646/zoosymposia.23.1.10 journal id: journals:5518 issn: 1178-9905 e-issn: 1178-9913 ut: 001227773300006 aquatic oligochaetes Clitellata Haplotaxis gordioides DNA barcoding diversity Journal Article Text 2023 fteawag https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.23.1.10 2024-07-28T23:33:26Z Haplotaxis Hoffmeister, 1843 is a poorly known genus: it is rarely collected because it usually inhabits groundwater, and many species are only known from immature specimens. Even the type species, Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) remains poorly defined because of the absence of reference types. Most of the Haplotaxis species have been placed in synonymy with H. gordioides since the end of the 19 th century, a situation that has remained essentially unchanged until now. As a result, the species is supposedly present on all continents, except Antarctica. This observation is all the more questionable as the aquatic subterranean environment is nowadays well known to harbour many species with restricted distribution, due to the strong hydrogeographic isolation and the low dispersal abilities of its inhabitants. In this study we assessed the hypothesis of H. gordioides as a single species with wide distribution versus a complex of cryptic species with narrow distribution. We used a DNA-barcoding approach based on the COI mitochondrial marker of 46 Haplotaxis specimens collected in Switzerland, mostly as part of a countrywide sampling campaign to study groundwater macroinvertebrates. Preliminary results suggested that H. gordioides is a complex of at least 6 cryptic species in Switzerland, which has important implications both for the knowledge of the exact identity of the type species and for the synonymy of most of the species described in the 19 th century. However, as it is based on a single-locus approach, this study should be seen as the first step in an integrative taxonomic process that should include additional biological material, the study of complementary markers (especially nuclear), and the morphological study of specimens. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica DORA Eawag Zoosymposia 23
institution Open Polar
collection DORA Eawag
op_collection_id fteawag
language English
topic aquatic oligochaetes
Clitellata
Haplotaxis gordioides
DNA barcoding
diversity
spellingShingle aquatic oligochaetes
Clitellata
Haplotaxis gordioides
DNA barcoding
diversity
Martin, Patrick
Knüsel, Mara
Alther, Roman
Altermatt, Florian
Ferrari, Benoît
Vivien, Régis
Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) (Annelida, Clitellata) as a sub-cosmopolitan species: a commonly held view challenged by DNA barcoding
topic_facet aquatic oligochaetes
Clitellata
Haplotaxis gordioides
DNA barcoding
diversity
description Haplotaxis Hoffmeister, 1843 is a poorly known genus: it is rarely collected because it usually inhabits groundwater, and many species are only known from immature specimens. Even the type species, Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) remains poorly defined because of the absence of reference types. Most of the Haplotaxis species have been placed in synonymy with H. gordioides since the end of the 19 th century, a situation that has remained essentially unchanged until now. As a result, the species is supposedly present on all continents, except Antarctica. This observation is all the more questionable as the aquatic subterranean environment is nowadays well known to harbour many species with restricted distribution, due to the strong hydrogeographic isolation and the low dispersal abilities of its inhabitants. In this study we assessed the hypothesis of H. gordioides as a single species with wide distribution versus a complex of cryptic species with narrow distribution. We used a DNA-barcoding approach based on the COI mitochondrial marker of 46 Haplotaxis specimens collected in Switzerland, mostly as part of a countrywide sampling campaign to study groundwater macroinvertebrates. Preliminary results suggested that H. gordioides is a complex of at least 6 cryptic species in Switzerland, which has important implications both for the knowledge of the exact identity of the type species and for the synonymy of most of the species described in the 19 th century. However, as it is based on a single-locus approach, this study should be seen as the first step in an integrative taxonomic process that should include additional biological material, the study of complementary markers (especially nuclear), and the morphological study of specimens.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Martin, Patrick
Knüsel, Mara
Alther, Roman
Altermatt, Florian
Ferrari, Benoît
Vivien, Régis
author_facet Martin, Patrick
Knüsel, Mara
Alther, Roman
Altermatt, Florian
Ferrari, Benoît
Vivien, Régis
author_sort Martin, Patrick
title Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) (Annelida, Clitellata) as a sub-cosmopolitan species: a commonly held view challenged by DNA barcoding
title_short Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) (Annelida, Clitellata) as a sub-cosmopolitan species: a commonly held view challenged by DNA barcoding
title_full Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) (Annelida, Clitellata) as a sub-cosmopolitan species: a commonly held view challenged by DNA barcoding
title_fullStr Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) (Annelida, Clitellata) as a sub-cosmopolitan species: a commonly held view challenged by DNA barcoding
title_full_unstemmed Haplotaxis gordioides (Hartmann in Oken, 1819) (Annelida, Clitellata) as a sub-cosmopolitan species: a commonly held view challenged by DNA barcoding
title_sort haplotaxis gordioides (hartmann in oken, 1819) (annelida, clitellata) as a sub-cosmopolitan species: a commonly held view challenged by dna barcoding
publisher Magnolia Press
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.23.1.10
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation Zoosymposia--Zoosymposia--journals:5518--1178-9905--1178-9913
eawag:31189
doi:10.11646/zoosymposia.23.1.10
journal id: journals:5518
issn: 1178-9905
e-issn: 1178-9913
ut: 001227773300006
op_doi https://doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.23.1.10
container_title Zoosymposia
container_volume 23
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