2016
DOI: 10.1163/1937240x-00002442
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“Gregaria” to “subrugosa,” that is the question: shape changes under laboratory conditions in the pelagic morphotype of the squat lobster Munida gregaria (Fabricius, 1793) (Decapoda: Anomura: Munididae)

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Cited by 9 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…species collected from cold-water coral and cold seep communities in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, based on combined molecular and morphological data, demonstrated that more recent phylogenetic relationships tend to have high support, but some older relationships remain unresolved(Coykendall et al 2017) (Figure2.3).Interestingly, the taxonomic status of two sympatric morphospecies, Munida gregaria(Fabricius, 1793) and Munida subrugosa Dana, 1852, was investigated by DNA sequence analysis, only to find them identical and invariant, suggesting that the two species represent a single dimorphic species (Pérez-Barros et al 2008). A follow-up study was conducted byDiez et al (2016), who elucidated evidence that M. gregaria is the only recorded species with two morphotypes, and hypothesise that transitions between the two morphotypes do not take place, i.e., pelagic individuals of the 'gregaria' form do not transform to the 'subrugosa' form, or vice versa. This conflict between genetic and morphological data supported the fact that squat lobster phylogenetic relationships are not easily assessed.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…species collected from cold-water coral and cold seep communities in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, based on combined molecular and morphological data, demonstrated that more recent phylogenetic relationships tend to have high support, but some older relationships remain unresolved(Coykendall et al 2017) (Figure2.3).Interestingly, the taxonomic status of two sympatric morphospecies, Munida gregaria(Fabricius, 1793) and Munida subrugosa Dana, 1852, was investigated by DNA sequence analysis, only to find them identical and invariant, suggesting that the two species represent a single dimorphic species (Pérez-Barros et al 2008). A follow-up study was conducted byDiez et al (2016), who elucidated evidence that M. gregaria is the only recorded species with two morphotypes, and hypothesise that transitions between the two morphotypes do not take place, i.e., pelagic individuals of the 'gregaria' form do not transform to the 'subrugosa' form, or vice versa. This conflict between genetic and morphological data supported the fact that squat lobster phylogenetic relationships are not easily assessed.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%