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Systematics of Alloteuthis (Cephalopoda:Loliginidae) based on molecular and morphometric data
Authors:Frank E. Anderson,Adria Pilsits,Vladimir Laptikhovsky,Eduardo Balguerí  as,Chingis Nigmatulin,Uwe Piatkowski,Alp Salman
Affiliation:a Department of Zoology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois 62901 USA
b Department of Biological Sciences, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri USA
c Falkland Islands Government Fisheries Department, FIQQ 1ZZ, Stanley, Falkland Islands
d Istituto Arion, Mola di Bari, Italy
e Centro Oceanografico de Canarias-IEO, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
f Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Cape Town 8012, South Africa
g Atlantic Research Institute of Marine Fisheries and Oceanography, 5 Dmitry Donskoy St., Kaliningrad 236000, Russia
h Instituto de Investigação das Pescas e do Mar, IPIMAR, Avenida de Brasília, 1449-006, Lisbon, Portugal
i Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften Forschungsbereich Düsternbrooker Weg 20 24105, Kiel, Germany
j UMR-IFREMER-100 Physiologie et Ecophysiologie des Mollusques Marins, I.B.F.A., Université de Caen Basse-Normandie, Esplanade de la Paix, 14032 Caen Cedex, France
k Ege University, Faculty of Fisheries, 35100 Bornova, Izmir, Turkey
l Unidade Técnica de Pesca de Baixura (UTPB), Servizo de Asesoría Técnica, Dirección Xeral de Recursos Mariños, Consellería de Pesca e Asuntos Marítimos Xunta de Galicia, 15704 Santiago de Compostela, Spain
Abstract:Alloteuthis is a group of small, slender loliginid squids of minor fisheries importance. There are three nominal Alloteuthis species—A. media (Linnaeus), A. subulata (Lamarck) and A. africana Adam. Two of these species (A. media and A. subulata) have largely overlapping ranges in the Mediterranean and northeastern Atlantic, while A. africana is found along the west coast of Africa. Despite the low level of species diversity, Alloteuthis taxonomy and systematics are confused, and assignment of specimens to species can be difficult. To clarify Alloteuthis systematics, we gathered morphometric data and DNA sequence data from two mitochondrial loci and a nuclear locus from Alloteuthis specimens collected from several localities. Analyses of the morphometric data suggest that head width is the main variable allowing separation of A. africana from the other two species, and central club sucker size separates A. media from A. subulata. One easily diagnosable character often used to distinguish Alloteuthis species—relative fin length—appears to be of little taxonomic value. Only three specimens assignable to A. subulata both morphologically and genetically were found, all from the Adriatic; possible reasons for this apparent rarity are discussed. Gene tree parsimony and coalescent-based methods were used to estimate species relationships from the molecular data, and both supported a sister-species relationship between A. media and A. subulata. Analyses of molecular variation (AMOVA's) revealed significant genetic differentiation between Atlantic and Mediterranean A. media. This study highlights the importance of 1) sampling multiple individuals, locations and loci for species-level phylogenetic studies, 2) using morphometric analyses to reveal taxonomically meaningful morphological characters and 3) accounting for the stochastic nature of the coalescent process when estimating species phylogenies for closely related taxa.
Keywords:Alloteuthis   AMOVA   Loliginidae   MANOVA   Molecular phylogenetics
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