TY - JOUR
T1 - Integrative taxonomy of a new and highly-diverse genus of onchidiid slugs from the coral triangle (Gastropoda, Pulmonata, Onchidiidae)
AU - Goulding, Tricia C.
AU - Khalil, Munawar
AU - Tan, Shau Hwai
AU - Dayrat, Benoît
N1 - Funding Information:
We are extremely grateful to all the people who helped us with field work in various ways, by hosting us at their institutions, helping with logistics, or accompanying us in the field. Our study would have been impossible without their generous help and efforts: Deepak Apte, Vishal Bhave, Sudhir Sapre, and C.R. Sreeraj in India; Neil Bruce in Queensland; Richard Willan in Northern Territory; Vivian Ang, Don Dumale, Joseph Comendador, and Marivene Manuel in the Philippines. We thank Philippe Bouchet (Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, Paris) for allowing us to study some material collected during an expedition he led in Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu. Accessing mangrove sites would have been impossible without help from local fishermen and villagers. We are grateful to Rahul C. Salunkhe and Yogesh Shouche (Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai, and National Center for Cell Science, Pune) for their help with the DNA sequencing of the specimens from India. We also thank Rani Chapla and David Piperato for assisting with DNA extractions in our lab at the Pennsylvania State University. We would also like to thank the collection managers of various institutions for accepting to host our material in their collections and sending us specimens on loan: Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai, India; Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, Paris, France; Museum of Tropical Queensland, Townsville, Queensland, Australia; National Museum of the Philippines, Manila, Philippines; Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main, Germany; Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, Germany; Zoological Museum of the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Specimens were collected following local regulations, as overseen by Deepak Apte (India), Marivene Manuel (Philippines), and Munawar Khalil (Indonesia). Collecting in New South Wales, Queensland, and Northern Territory was done with permits from local institutions. We thank the Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education, Republic of Indonesia (Ristek-Dikti) that issued a research permit to Benoît Dayrat (Ristek #134/ SIP/FRP/E5/Dit.KI/VI/2017). We also wish to thank the Universitas Malikussaleh, Sumatra, Indonesia, for being our home base institution in Indonesia. This work was supported by the Eberly College of Science at the Pennsylvania State University and by a REVSYS (Revisionary Syntheses in Systematics) award from the US National Science Foundation (DEB 1419394). We also thank Nathalie Yonow, Adrienne Jochum and Antonio M. de Frias Martins for their careful attention to this manuscript and their constructive comments which have greatly improved this manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© Tricia C. Goulding et al.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - A new genus of onchidiid slugs, Wallaconchis Goulding & Dayrat, gen. n., is described, including ten species. Five species were previously described but known only from the type material: Wallaconchis ater (Lesson, 1830), W. graniferum (Semper, 1880), W. nangkauriense (Plate, 1893), W. buetschlii (Stantschinsky, 1907), and W. gracile (Stantschinsky, 1907), all of which were originally classified in Onchidium Buchannan, 1800. Many new records are provided for these five species, which greatly expand their known geographic distributions. Five species are new: Wallaconchis achleitneri Goulding, sp. n., W. comendadori Goulding & Dayrat, sp. n., W. melanesiensis Goulding & Dayrat, sp. n., W. sinanui Goulding & Dayrat, sp. n., and W. uncinus Goulding & Dayrat, sp. n. Nine of the ten Wallaconchis species are found in the Coral Triangle (eastern Indonesia and the Philippines). Sympatry is high, with up to six species found on the island of Bohol (Philippines) and eight species overlapping in northern Sulawesi (Indonesia). Wallaconchis is distinguished from other onchidiids by its bright dorsal colors (red, yellow, orange) but those are extremely variable and not useful for specific identification. Internally, the reproductive system can be used to identify all Wallaconchis species. The copulatory organs of Wallaconchis species are especially diverse compared to other onchidiid genera, and the possible role of reproductive incompatibility in species diversification is discussed. All specimens examined were freshly collected for the purpose of a worldwide revision of the Onchidiidae Rafinesque, 1815. The species are well delineated using DNA sequences and comparative anatomy. Mitochondrial DNA analysis yields thirteen molecular units separated by a large barcode gap, while nuclear DNAyields nine units. By integrating nuclear DNA and mitochondrial DNA with morphology, ten species are recognized. The natural history of each species (e.g., the microhabitat where they are found) is also documented. Nomenclature is addressed thoroughly (the types of all onchidiid species were examined, lectotypes were designated when needed, nomina dubia are discussed). Morphological characters, transitions to new microhabitats, and diversification processes are discussed in the context of a robust molecular phylogeny.
AB - A new genus of onchidiid slugs, Wallaconchis Goulding & Dayrat, gen. n., is described, including ten species. Five species were previously described but known only from the type material: Wallaconchis ater (Lesson, 1830), W. graniferum (Semper, 1880), W. nangkauriense (Plate, 1893), W. buetschlii (Stantschinsky, 1907), and W. gracile (Stantschinsky, 1907), all of which were originally classified in Onchidium Buchannan, 1800. Many new records are provided for these five species, which greatly expand their known geographic distributions. Five species are new: Wallaconchis achleitneri Goulding, sp. n., W. comendadori Goulding & Dayrat, sp. n., W. melanesiensis Goulding & Dayrat, sp. n., W. sinanui Goulding & Dayrat, sp. n., and W. uncinus Goulding & Dayrat, sp. n. Nine of the ten Wallaconchis species are found in the Coral Triangle (eastern Indonesia and the Philippines). Sympatry is high, with up to six species found on the island of Bohol (Philippines) and eight species overlapping in northern Sulawesi (Indonesia). Wallaconchis is distinguished from other onchidiids by its bright dorsal colors (red, yellow, orange) but those are extremely variable and not useful for specific identification. Internally, the reproductive system can be used to identify all Wallaconchis species. The copulatory organs of Wallaconchis species are especially diverse compared to other onchidiid genera, and the possible role of reproductive incompatibility in species diversification is discussed. All specimens examined were freshly collected for the purpose of a worldwide revision of the Onchidiidae Rafinesque, 1815. The species are well delineated using DNA sequences and comparative anatomy. Mitochondrial DNA analysis yields thirteen molecular units separated by a large barcode gap, while nuclear DNAyields nine units. By integrating nuclear DNA and mitochondrial DNA with morphology, ten species are recognized. The natural history of each species (e.g., the microhabitat where they are found) is also documented. Nomenclature is addressed thoroughly (the types of all onchidiid species were examined, lectotypes were designated when needed, nomina dubia are discussed). Morphological characters, transitions to new microhabitats, and diversification processes are discussed in the context of a robust molecular phylogeny.
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U2 - 10.3897/zookeys.763.21252
DO - 10.3897/zookeys.763.21252
M3 - Article
C2 - 29896045
AN - SCOPUS:85048475319
SN - 1313-2989
VL - 2018
SP - 1
EP - 111
JO - ZooKeys
JF - ZooKeys
IS - 763
ER -