2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2020.106780
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New insights about species delimitation in red snappers (Lutjanus purpureus and L. campechanus) using multilocus data

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Cited by 12 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Some controversy has also been observed around L. purpureus. Some authors consider the occurrence of a second species in northern Brazil (Silva et al, 2020), Lutjanus campechanus, which is difficult to morphologically differentiate from L. purpureus. Here, again, the original name, L. purpureus, has been maintained until further studies confirm the presence of this second species.…”
Section: Species Landedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some controversy has also been observed around L. purpureus. Some authors consider the occurrence of a second species in northern Brazil (Silva et al, 2020), Lutjanus campechanus, which is difficult to morphologically differentiate from L. purpureus. Here, again, the original name, L. purpureus, has been maintained until further studies confirm the presence of this second species.…”
Section: Species Landedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Populations of Bathygobius soporator from the Gulf of Mexico and eastern U.S. have also been shown to be distinct from those in the Caribbean and Brazil (Tornabene et al 2010;Tornabene and Pezold 2011;Rodríguez-Rey et al 2017). Other examples of sister lineages occurring in the Caribbean versus the Gulf of Mexico/eastern U.S. can be found in the Menticirrus americanus species complex (Marceniuk et al 2020), the Lutjanus campechanus and L. purpureus species pair (Pedraza-Marrón et al 2019;da Silva et al 2020), the Scartella cristata species complex (Araujo et al 2020), the genus Bagre (Betancur-R 2009), and in Epinephelus adscensionis (Carlin et al 2003). In many cases these speciation patterns are thought to be a product of environmental variation between provinces as opposed to hard barriers to gene flow between the regions (Rocha et al 2005;Robertson and Cramer 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They are also frequently found around artificial substrates such as shipwrecks (e.g., the wreck Queen of Nassau in southeast Florida), tires, and derelict ropes and fishing gear. This species and C. insolata Cuvier & Valenciennes, 1830, are the two most common pomacentrids on lower-mesophotic and rariphotic reefs in the Caribbean. In Brazil, C. insolata is replaced by its southern mesophotic counterpart, C. jubauna Moura, 1995, and the latter often schools with C. vanbebberae on coastal reefs; however, C. vanbebberae is the only mesophotic Chromis recorded in Brazilian oceanic islands.…”
Section: Chromis Vanbebberaementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, we changed the names for two of Davies and Piontek's (2017) species: Davies and Piontek (2017) recorded L. campechanus (Poey, 1860), which is now known to be restricted to the Gulf of Mexico and US area. The taxonomic separation of L. purpureus, which ranges from the Caribbean to Brazil, from L. campechanus was recently confirmed by da Silva et al (2020). Piontek (2017) recorded S mitsukurii Jordan &Snyder, 1903.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 86%