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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/18178
Title: Distinct suites of pre- and post-adaptations indicate independent evolutionary pathways of snapping claws in the shrimp family Alpheidae (Decapoda: Caridea)
Authors: Chow, Lai Him
De Grave, Sammy
Anker, Arthur
Poon, Karina Ka Yan
Ma, Ka Yan
Chu, Ka Hou
Chan, Tin-Yam 
Tsang, Ling Ming
Keywords: MULTIPLE SEQUENCE ALIGNMENT;MORPHOLOGICAL PHYLOGENY;CRUSTACEA;GENUS;BEHAVIOR;MODEL;CAVE;BIOLOGY;RECORDS;ORIGIN
Issue Date: Nov-2021
Publisher: WILEY
Journal Volume: 75
Journal Issue: 11
Start page/Pages: 2898-2910
Source: EVOLUTION
Abstract: 
One of the most notable evolutionary innovations of marine invertebrates is the snapping claw of alpheid shrimps (Alpheidae), capable of generating a powerful water jet and a shock wave, used for defense, aggression, excavation, and communication. Evolutionary analysis of this character complex requires the study of a suite of complementary traits to discern pre-adaptations or post-adaptations of snapping behavior. A comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of the Alpheidae based on two mitochondrial and four nuclear markers, covering 107 species from 38 genera (77.6% generic coverage), is presented. Ancestral state reconstruction analyses revealed five independent origins of snapping, two of which relate to the morphologically similar but phylogenetically distant genera Alpheus and Synalpheus, highlighting significant convergence. The evolution of the five complementary traits (adhesive plaques, tooth-cavity system, dactylar joint type, chela size enlargement, and orbital hood) did not always show a significant correlation with the evolution of snapping overall, sometimes only in a few lineages, suggesting different evolutionary pathways were involved and demonstrating the versatility in the evolution of the snapping mechanisms.
URI: http://scholars.ntou.edu.tw/handle/123456789/18178
ISSN: 0014-3820
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14351
Appears in Collections:海洋生物研究所
14 LIFE BELOW WATER

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