File(s) under permanent embargo
Systematics of the freshwater crayfish genus Cherax Erichson (Decapoda: Parastacidae) in south-western Australia: electrophoretic, morphological and habitat variation
A detailed study of electrophoretic, morphological and habitat variation amongst species of Cherax in south-western Australia supported the recognition of only five of the eight species currently recognised and revealed that morphological and habitat variation within these crayfish is more extensive and complicated than was previously realised. Within several species morphological and habitat variation was found to be as great as that between species. Furthermore, a major component of the morphological variability, both within and between species, was found to be associated with habitat variation. Three of the five species of Cherax recognised in this study correspond to the consistently recognised and widespread species, C. preissii Erichson, C. quinquecarinatus (Gray) and C. tenuimanus Smith. The two other species are C. crassimanus Riek and C. glaber Riek which have restricted distributions in the extreme south-west of Western Australia. The species C. glabrimanus Riek and C. neocarinatus Riek could not be distinguished from C. quinquecarinatus, nor could C. plebejus (Hess) be distinguished from C. preissii. On a general level, the results of this study question the value of morphological information in systematic studies of freshwater crayfish. Morphologically based taxonomic studies of freshwater crayfish need to ha interpreted with caution because, firstly, taxonomic characters may be far more variable than realised; secondly, morphological and habitat differences cannot necessarily be equated with specific distinctions; and thirdly, genetically distinct species that occupy similar habitats need not be morphologically distinct.
History
Journal
Australian journal of zoologyVolume
44Issue
3Pagination
223 - 258Publisher
CSIROLocation
Clayton, Vic.Publisher DOI
ISSN
0004-959XeISSN
1446-5698Language
engPublication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
1996, CSIROUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
Licence
Exports
RefWorks
BibTeX
Ref. manager
Endnote
DataCite
NLM
DC