IDEA   23902
INSTITUTO DE DIVERSIDAD Y ECOLOGIA ANIMAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Taxonomic evidence and distribution records suggest dispersal processes on the ascidian Asterocarpa humilis (Heller, 1878) across distant areas of the Southern Hemisphere
Autor/es:
DE ARANZAMENDI, CARLA; TURON, X; MAGGIONI, T.; TATIÁN, M; TAVERNA, A; ALURRALDE G
Revista:
INVERTEBRATE SYSTEMATICS
Editorial:
CSIRO PUBLISHING
Referencias:
Lugar: Collingwood; Año: 2021 vol. 35 p. 675 - 687
ISSN:
1445-5226
Resumen:
AbstractTaxonomic uncertainties and the lack of ecological knowledge can hinder the correct identification and the biogeographic status of widely distributed marine species. The ascidian Asterocarpa humilis (Heller, 1878), originally described from New Zealand, has a broad distribution in shallow temperate areas of the Southern Hemisphere, having recently colonized areas of the Northern Hemisphere. A close species, Cnemidocarpa robinsoni Hartmeyer, 1916, has been reported in the South-Eastern Pacific and the South-Western Atlantic, and many while some authors considered it a junior synonym of A. humilis, still others consider it a separate. To solve such uncertainties, we gathered for the first time morphological and genetic data from specimens of distant areas. We studied the morphology of specimens collected at seven locations of South America. Besides, we re-examined specimens from museum collections and revised available literature on these species. Genetic data were obtained from specimens of Argentina and compared with available sequences of A. humilis from Chile, New Zealand, England and France. Morphological and genetic analyses showed that all compared specimens were conspecific. Besides, specimens from different continents shared haplotypes and exhibited low genetic distance among them. These results, the biological characteristics of this ascidian and its long presence in different habitats from disjoint areas, allow us to question its native range. We support the idea that A. humilis is a cryptogenic for the South-Western Atlantic and neocosmopolitan species that has been spread by maritime traffic through the Southern Hemisphere, revealing frequent processes of exchange through this wide area since more than a century, with presumably associated alterations in the marine biota.