The Hyalella species flock of Lake Titicaca (Crustacea: Amphipoda): Perspectives and drawbacks of DNA-based Identification

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Abstract

Lake Titicaca, in the High Andes of Peru and Bolivia, harbours the world's third most speciose ancientlake amphipod radiation on record. A minimum of nineteen species of Hyalella derived from at least five independent colonization episodes concentrate in this high altitude water body, although the actual species number present has not yet been established and could be much higher. Herein, we take advantage of the description of three new species (H. krolli, H. gonzalezi, and H. hirsuta) and the re-description of other two (H. solida and H. nefrens) to assess the feasibility of adopting a DNA-based identification approach to resolve the magnitude of this highly speciose amphipod assemblage. A Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of the evolutionary relationships among South American Hyalella cox1 haplotypes, including those of four out of the five species dealt with herein, shows a great disagreement between taxonomic units delimited under morphological and genetic data, hampering species identification exclusively based on cox1 DNA barcode sequences.

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Jaume, D., Zapelloni, F., Pons, J., Juan, C., & Jurado-Rivera, J. A. (2021). The Hyalella species flock of Lake Titicaca (Crustacea: Amphipoda): Perspectives and drawbacks of DNA-based Identification. Contributions to Zoology, 125(1), 1–54. https://doi.org/10.1163/18759866-bja10021

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