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A new yeti crab phylogeny: Vent origins with indications of regional extinction in the East Pacific

  • 주제(기타) Multidisciplinary Sciences
  • 설명문(일반) [Roterman, Christopher Nicolai] Univ Oxford, Dept Zool, Oxford, Oxon, England; [Lee, Won-Kyung; Won, Yong-Jin] Ewha Womans Univ, Div EcoSci, Dept Life Sci, Seoul, South Korea; [Lee, Won-Kyung] Korea Inst Ocean Sci & Technol, Deep Sea & Seabed Mineral Resources Res Ctr, Ansan, South Korea; [Liu, Xinming] Guangxi Acad Oceanog, Nanning, Peoples R China; [Liu, Xinming; Li, Xinzheng] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Oceanol, Qingdao, Peoples R China; [Lin, Rongcheng] State Ocean Adm, Inst Oceanog 3, Xiamen, Peoples R China; [Li, Xinzheng] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China; [Li, Xinzheng] Qingdao Natl Lab Marine Sci & Technol, Lab Marine Biol & Biotechnol, Qingdao, Peoples R China
  • 등재 SCIE, SCOPUS
  • 발행기관 PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
  • 발행년도 2018
  • URI http://www.dcollection.net/handler/ewha/000000151573
  • 본문언어 영어
  • Published As http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0194696

초록/요약

The recent discovery of two new species of kiwaid squat lobsters on hydrothermal vents in the Pacific Ocean and in the Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean has prompted a re-analysis of Kiwaid biogeographical history. Using a larger alignment with more fossil calibrated nodes than previously, we consider the precise relationship between Kiwaidae, Chirostylidae and Eumunididae within Chirostyloidea (Decapoda: Anomura) to be still unresolved at present. Additionally, the placement of both new species within a new "Bristly" clade along with the seep-associated Kiwa puravida is most parsimoniously interpreted as supporting a vent origin for the family, rather than a seep-to-vent progression. Fossil-calibrated divergence analysis indicates an origin for the clade around the Eocene-Oligocene boundary in the eastern Pacific similar to 33-38 Ma, coincident with a lowering of bottom temperatures and increased ventilation in the Pacific deep sea. Likewise, the mid-Miocene (similar to 10-16 Ma) rapid radiation of the new Bristly clade also coincides with a similar cooling event in the tropical East Pacific. The distribution, diversity, tree topology and divergence timing of Kiwaidae in the East Pacific is most consistent with a pattern of extinctions, recolonisations and radiations along fast-spreading ridges in this region and may have been punctuated by large-scale fluctuations in deep-water ventilation and temperature during the Cenozoic; further affecting the viability of Kiwaidae populations along portions of mid-ocean ridge.

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