Amphipod crustaceans were collected at all 55 stations sampled with an epibenthic sledge
during two IceAGE expeditions (Icelandic marine Animals: Genetics and
Ecology) in 2011 and 2013. In total, 34 amphipod families and three superfamilies were
recorded in the samples. Distribution maps are presented for each taxon along with a
summary of the regional taxonomy for the group. Statistical analyses based on
presence/absence data revealed a pattern of family distributions that correlated with
sampling depth. Clustering according to the geographic location of the stations
(northernmost North Atlantic Sea and Arctic Ocean) can also be observed. IceAGE data for the Amphilochidae and
Oedicerotidae were analysed on species level; in
case of the Amphilochidae they were compared to the findings
from a previous Icelandic benthic survey, BIOICE (Benthic Invertebrates of Icelandic waters), which also identified a
high abundance of amphipod fauna.
Amphipods constitute an abundant part of Icelandic deep-sea zoobenthos yet knowledge of the diversity of this fauna, particularly at the molecular level, is scarce. The present work aims to use molecular methods to investigate genetic variation of the Amphipoda sampled during two IceAGE collecting expeditions. The mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (COI) of 167 individuals originally assigned to 75 morphospecies was analysed. These targeted morhospecies were readily identifiable by experts using light microscopy and representative of families where there is current ongoing taxonomic research. The study resulted in 81 Barcode Identity Numbers (BINs) (of which >90% were published for the first time), while Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery revealed the existence of 78 to 83 Molecular Operational Taxonomic Units (MOTUs). Six nominal species (Rhachotropis
helleri, Arrhis
phyllonyx, Deflexilodes
tenuirostratus, Paroediceros
propinquus, Metopa
boeckii, Astyra
abyssi) appeared to have a molecular variation higher than the 0.03 threshold of both p-distance and K2P usually used for amphipod species delineation. Conversely, two Oedicerotidae regarded as separate morphospecies clustered together with divergences in the order of intraspecific variation. The incongruence between the BINs associated with presently identified species and the publicly available data of the same taxa was observed in case of Paramphithoe
hystrix and Amphilochus
manudens. The findings from this research project highlight the necessity of supporting molecular studies with thorough morphology species analyses.
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