Species Diversity (Apr 2024)
Testing the Species Status of the Chromodorid Nudibranch Goniobranchus aureopurpureus (Mollusca: Gastropoda)
Abstract
The chromodorid nudibranch Goniobranchus aureopurpureus (Collingwood, 1881) is characterized by numerous yellow spots on a white mantle that is bordered with purple spots. It is believed to be widely distributed in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres in the West Pacific, showing color varieties in a more-or-less geographically coherent manner. Chromodoris variata Risbec, 1928 (type locality: New Caledonia) has been considered a synonym. In addition, three, similar-looking congeners have been proposed as synonymous with G. aureopurpureus: G. albopustulosus (Pease, 1860) (type locality: Hawaii), G. alius (Rudman, 1987) (type locality: Tanzania), and G. rufomaculatus (Pease, 1871) (type locality: French Polynesia). To test the synonymies proposed above, we performed maximum-likelihood and Bayesian-inference analyses utilizing partial sequences of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) and 16S rRNA genes. The taxon sampling included a specimen of G. aureopurpureus newly collected in Hokkaido, Japan, along with other sequences of Goniobranchus deposited in public databases (31 specimens representing 22 species), including one identified as ‘Chromodoris aureopurpurea’ from New South Wales, Australia; G. albopustulosus from Hawaii; and two ‘Chromodoris rufomaculata’ from Guam and the Mariana Islands. Goniobranchus aureopurpureus from Japan and from Australia were sister taxa in the resulting trees but differed from each other by 8.6% in terms of 658-bp COI, suggesting that these two represent closely-related but different biological entities. For the Australian taxon, Goniobranchus cf. variatus comb. nov. is proposed herein. Goniobranchus albopustulosus and G. rufomaculatus were not closely related to the G. aureopurpureus–G. cf. variatus clade, rejecting the hypothesis that they are synonymous with either of these species. However, G. albopustulosus and G. rufomaculatus appeared to comprise a single biological entity, warranting further investigation of this potential synonymy. The placement of the Indian Ocean G. alius also remains to be tested.
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