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Original Article

Aeolidia papillosa (Linnaeus, 1761) (Mollusca: Heterobranchia: Nudibranchia), single species or a cryptic species complex? A morphological and molecular study

Karen Kienberger

Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar y Ambientales, Campus de Excelencia Internacional del Mar (CEI·MAR), Universidad de Cádiz, Polígono Río San Pedro, s/n, Ap. 40, 11510 Puerto Real, Cádiz, Spain

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Leila Carmona

Corresponding Author

Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar y Ambientales, Campus de Excelencia Internacional del Mar (CEI·MAR), Universidad de Cádiz, Polígono Río San Pedro, s/n, Ap. 40, 11510 Puerto Real, Cádiz, Spain

Corresponding author. Present address: Department of Marine Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Box 460, 40530, Gothenburg, Sweden. E‐mail:

leila.carmona.barnosi@marine.gu.se

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Marta Pola

Departamento de Biología, Edificio de Biología, Campus de Excelencia Internacional UAM+CSIC, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, C/Darwin, 2, 28049 Madrid, Spain

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Vinicius Padula

SNSB, Zoologische Staatssammlung München, Münchhausenstraße 21, 82147 Munich, Germany

Biocenter/Ludwig Maximilian, University of Munich, Großhadernerstraße 2, Planegg‐Martinsried, 82152 Munich, Germany

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Terrence M. Gosliner

Department of Invertebrate Zoology, California Academy of Sciences, 55 Music Concourse Drive, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA, 94118 USA

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Juan Lucas Cervera

Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias del Mar y Ambientales, Campus de Excelencia Internacional del Mar (CEI·MAR), Universidad de Cádiz, Polígono Río San Pedro, s/n, Ap. 40, 11510 Puerto Real, Cádiz, Spain

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First published: 13 June 2016
Cited by: 1

Abstract

Aeolidia papillosa (Linnaeus, 1761) is a well‐known aeolidiid species that has been reported to have a worldwide distribution in cold–temperate waters, mainly from the northern hemisphere. Molecular tools have recently shown that most cosmopolitan species usually belong to a taxonomic species complex. Here we used integrative taxonomy to test the range of distribution of A. papillosa, and to assess the existence of a putative species complex that has been traditionally included as a single species under the name A. papillosa. Maximum‐likelihood and Bayesian analyses of partial DNA sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I and 16S rRNA genes, and the nuclear gene histone 3, were used to infer phylogenetic trees. Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery (ABGD) species delimitation analyses and morphological study complemented the phylogenetic approach. Our results show that A. papillosa is a cosmopolitan and an amphi‐Atlantic species, being distributed in the eastern and western Atlantic as well as in the eastern Pacific; however, some specimens from the UK and the Netherlands, together with specimens from Portugal, Galicia, and France, as well as the Californian and Oregon populations, emerge as two pseudocryptic species described herein: Aeolidia filomenae sp. nov. and Aeolidia loui sp. nov., respectively. Finally, the specimens from Chilean coasts, previously attributed to A. papillosa, belong to a different species, Aeolidia campbellii (Cunningham, 1871), that is a senior synonym of Aeolidia serotina Bergh, 1873.

Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 1

  • , External diversity is restrained by internal conservatism: New nudibranch mollusc contributes to the cryptic species problem, Zoologica Scripta, 46, 6, (683-692), (2017).