Just Accepted
This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.
Does morphological diversity in amphidromous Macrobrachium (Decapoda: Palaemonidae) reflect species homology or habitat partitioning?
Abstract
The taxonomy of the genus Macrobrachium, a group of mostly amphidromous shrimps inhabiting unstable streams on Indo-Pacific tropical islands, is based on several characters repeatedly associated with specific environments and stream velocities. This allows the identification of morphological traits that improve an organism’s stability in given flow condition and an assessment of their monophyly. This study investigates whether the altitude-dependent distribution of certain Macrobrachium species - characterized by specific morphological traits - is phylogenetically constrained or a result of phenotypic plasticity. We first use an integrative taxonomy approach to assess species hypotheses based on about 200 individuals collected across the Indo-Pacific. We then construct multi-gene phylogenetic trees (65 individuals; 3-5 concatenated genes; 2,711 bp) to explore the evolutionary origins of morphological similarities among closely related species. Our results support the species status of 30 Macrobrachium species, with 16 exhibiting distinct morphologies and 14 forming five species complexes. Phylogenetic and distribution patterns of closely related species suggest habitat-driven speciation, with species differentiating in similar environments across vast distances. This indicates that diversification can occur over large distances, yet still in sympatry within a given environment. Lastly, our findings suggest that Macrobrachium body shape is derived from evolutionarily conserved adaptations to flow velocity.
IS24084 Accepted 10 May 2025
© CSIRO 2025