Taxonomy (Apr 2021)

Saved by the Shell: Molecular Analysis Detects the Cryptic Sea Hare, <i>Aplysia concava</i> G. B. Sowerby I, 1833 (Mollusca: Heterobranchia: Aplysiidae), from Oceania, with a Redescription

  • Matt J. Nimbs,
  • Nerida G. Wilson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/taxonomy1020006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2
pp. 48 – 59

Abstract

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A recent taxonomic revision split the circumglobal sea hare Aplysia parvula into 10 constituent taxa, of which only three are likely to be found in the Southern Pacific. This prompted an investigation of animals previously identified as A. parvula from Australia. Specimens collected from Eastern Australia and Hunter Island, east of New Caledonia, could not be satisfactorily identified with any of the currently accepted taxa based on morphological diagnostic features listed in the revision; however, the presence of a highly concave shell is diagnostic. Quantification of genetic divergence using Cytochrome Oxidase I (COI) supports the delineation of this species as a distinct taxon, and a phylogenetic reconstruction based on concatenated COI, 16S and H3 markers reveals a sister relationship with the newly described Aplysia ghanimii from the Atlantic and Western Indian Oceans and an undescribed species from Japan. As a result, the name Aplysia concava G. B. Sowerby, I, 1833 is resurrected for this species. As the original description was based solely on a shell, a redescription is provided here with photographs of living animals and microscope images of internal anatomical structures.

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