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A preliminary study of 16S rRNA sequence variation in Australia Macrobrachium shrimps (Palaemonidae: Decapoda) reveals inconsistencies in their current classification

journal contribution
posted on 2002-01-01, 00:00 authored by N Murphy, Chris AustinChris Austin
The systematic relationships among Australian palaemonid shrimps have been the subject of speculation for some time. A preliminary phylogenetic study was undertaken to clarify the relationships of five species, Macrobrachium intermedium (Stimpson), M. australiense (Holthuis), M. atactum (Riek), M. rosenbergii (de Man) and Palaemon serenus (Heller), using 16S rRNA mitochondrial gene sequences. Phylogenetic analyses indicated inconsistencies with the current classification in two respects. First, M. intermedium formed a very well-supported clade with P. serenus distinct from M. australiense, M. atactum and M. rosenbergii. Second, the two species from inland Australia, M. australiense and M. atactum, showed a high level of genetic similarity over a substantial geographic range, suggesting that they may represent conspecific populations. The taxonomic and biogeographic implications of these findings for Macrobrachium in Australia are discussed.

History

Journal

Invertebrate systematics

Volume

16

Issue

5

Pagination

697 - 701

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Location

Collingwood, Vic.

ISSN

1445-5226

eISSN

1447-2600

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2002, CSIRO