TY - JOUR
T1 - And then there were many
T2 - insights from the tangled taxonomy of the Antarctic brittle star Ophioplinthus gelida (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea)
AU - Sands, Chester J.
AU - O’Hara, Timothy D.
AU - Guzzi, Alice
AU - Goodall-Copestake, William P.
AU - Convey, Peter
AU - Narayanaswamy, Bhavani E.
AU - Martín-Ledo, Rafael
AU - Stöhr, Sabine
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 Sands, O’Hara, Guzzi, Goodall-Copestake, Convey, Narayanaswamy, Martín-Ledo and Stöhr.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - To effectively manage biological assemblages, a sound knowledge of the biodiversity is essential. The Southern Ocean shelf benthic assemblages are typically comprised of species, the names of which are shared across the huge expanse of the region, indicating large population sizes and good connectivity, inferring resilience. This is despite two decades of studies identifying cryptic or unrecognised species in many benthic groups. In this study we examine the common and widespread species Ophioplinthus gelida (Koehler, 1900) and Ophioplinthus martensi (Studer, 1885), both regarded as occurring throughout the Southern Ocean on continental and island shelves. The two species show subtle differences in morphology, despite O. gelida having very plastic character states. Genetic analysis using mitochondrial sequences shows that the two species are part of a radiating clade with ten distinct elements, six of which group as O. gelida and four as O. martensi. Further investigation showed that one of these elements can be attributed to Ophioplinthus carinata (Studer, 1876), not previously identified on the Antarctic shelf, but shown here to be a dominant fraction of the O. “gelida” in our collections. Furthermore, O. “martensi” from its type locality of South Georgia is genetically similar to Ophioplinthus intorta (Lyman, 1878), from Marion Island, but distinct from those collected from the Antarctic shelf, which may then be considered Ophioplinthus inermis (Bell, 1902). A fifth clade of O. martensi collected from waters deeper than 2000 m was not part of this radiation but grouped together with more distantly related Ophioplinthus species. In general, the genus displays a wide range of morphological character states, varying greatly within O. gelida elements, and often shared between species. Several taxa outside of the O. gelida complex may also include unrecognised cryptic species, making reliable field identifications challenging, and greatly increasing the recognised species diversity and regional endemism.
AB - To effectively manage biological assemblages, a sound knowledge of the biodiversity is essential. The Southern Ocean shelf benthic assemblages are typically comprised of species, the names of which are shared across the huge expanse of the region, indicating large population sizes and good connectivity, inferring resilience. This is despite two decades of studies identifying cryptic or unrecognised species in many benthic groups. In this study we examine the common and widespread species Ophioplinthus gelida (Koehler, 1900) and Ophioplinthus martensi (Studer, 1885), both regarded as occurring throughout the Southern Ocean on continental and island shelves. The two species show subtle differences in morphology, despite O. gelida having very plastic character states. Genetic analysis using mitochondrial sequences shows that the two species are part of a radiating clade with ten distinct elements, six of which group as O. gelida and four as O. martensi. Further investigation showed that one of these elements can be attributed to Ophioplinthus carinata (Studer, 1876), not previously identified on the Antarctic shelf, but shown here to be a dominant fraction of the O. “gelida” in our collections. Furthermore, O. “martensi” from its type locality of South Georgia is genetically similar to Ophioplinthus intorta (Lyman, 1878), from Marion Island, but distinct from those collected from the Antarctic shelf, which may then be considered Ophioplinthus inermis (Bell, 1902). A fifth clade of O. martensi collected from waters deeper than 2000 m was not part of this radiation but grouped together with more distantly related Ophioplinthus species. In general, the genus displays a wide range of morphological character states, varying greatly within O. gelida elements, and often shared between species. Several taxa outside of the O. gelida complex may also include unrecognised cryptic species, making reliable field identifications challenging, and greatly increasing the recognised species diversity and regional endemism.
KW - Ophiuroidea
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - benthos
KW - conservation biology
KW - diversity
KW - speciation
KW - taxonomy
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105013374563
U2 - 10.3389/fmars.2025.1615695
DO - 10.3389/fmars.2025.1615695
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105013374563
SN - 2296-7745
VL - 12
JO - Frontiers in Marine Science
JF - Frontiers in Marine Science
M1 - 1615695
ER -