4.5 Article

Systematics of the Arboreal Neotropical 'thorellii' Clade of Centruroides Bark Scorpions (Buthidae) and the Efficacy of Mini-Barcodes for Museum Specimens

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d13090441

Keywords

scorpions; taxonomy; phylogenetics; species delimitation; COI; genetic degradation; morphology

Funding

  1. Vincent Roth Fund for Systematic Research of the American Arachnological Society
  2. AMNH
  3. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF)
  4. CUNY/NSF AGEP Grant
  5. CUNY Presidential Fellowship
  6. CUNY College Now Fellowship
  7. NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship [1003087]
  8. Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Fund of the AMNH
  9. Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University
  10. NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant [DEB 0910147]
  11. NSF [DEB 0413453]
  12. Richard Lounsbery Foundation
  13. Div Of Biological Infrastructure
  14. Direct For Biological Sciences [1003087] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The study explored the effectiveness of mini-barcodes combined with longer COI gene sequences in the systematics of Centruroides bark scorpions. The results supported the recognition of nine species within the 'thorellii' clade and demonstrated the efficacy of mini-barcodes for identifying morphologically similar cryptic species using specimens of variable age and preservation.
Fragmented and degraded DNA is pervasive among museum specimens, hindering molecular phylogenetics and species identification. Mini-barcodes, 200-300-base-pair (bp) fragments of barcoding genes, have proven effective for species-level identification of specimens from which complete barcodes cannot be obtained in many groups, but have yet to be tested in arachnids. The present study investigated the efficacy of mini-barcodes combined with longer sequences of the Cytochrome c Oxidase Subunit I (COI) gene in the systematics of the arboreal Neotropical 'thorellii' clade of Centruroides Marx, 1890 bark scorpions (Buthidae, C.L. Koch 1837), the species of which have proven to be difficult to identify and delimit due to their similar morphology. The phylogeny of 53 terminals, representing all nine species of the clade and representative species belonging to related clades of Centruroides, rooted on Heteroctenus junceus (Herbst, 1800) and based on up to 1078 base pairs of COI and 112 morphological characters, is presented to test the monophyly of the clade and the limits of its component species. The results support the recognition of nine species of the 'thorellii' clade, in accordance with a recent taxonomic revision, and highlight the efficacy of mini-barcodes for identifying morphologically similar cryptic species using specimens of variable age and preservation.

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