Gondwanan groundwater: subterranean connections of Australian phreatoicidean isopods (Crustacea) to India and New Zealand
George D. F. WilsonAustralian Museum, Sydney, New South Wales 2010, Australia. Email: buz.wilson@austmus.gov.au
Invertebrate Systematics 22(2) 301-310 https://doi.org/10.1071/IS07030
Submitted: 5 July 2007 Accepted: 29 January 2008 Published: 12 May 2008
Abstract
Phreatoicidea Stebbing, 1893 live in freshwaters of Gondwana: Australia, South Africa, India and New Zealand. Many of these isopods have a subterranean lifestyle. Parsimony analysis of morphological data of generic exemplars and a Triassic fossil was used to explore the timing of this habitat adaption. The monophyly of the Hypsimetopidae Nicholls, 1943, including blind taxa Hyperoedesipus Nicholls & Milner, 1923 (Western Australia), Nichollsia Chopra and Tiwari, 1950 (Ganges Plain, India) and Phreatoicoides Sayce, 1900 (Tasmania and Victoria) was strongly supported. Crenisopus Wilson and Keable, 1999 (Kimberleys, Western Australia) and the PonderellidaeWilson & Keable, 2004 (Queensland mound springs) may be sister to hypsimetopids. Blind Phreatoicidae found only in south-eastern Australia and in New Zealand were also monophyletic. The hypogean habitat, blindness, fossil and plate tectonic evidence were mapped on the cladogram to estimate timing of this adaptation. A subterranean adaptation before 130 million years ago was supported for hypsimetopids. Phreatoicus Chilton, 1891 and Neophreatoicus Nicholls, 1944 (hypogean in New Zealand) were in a monophyletic clade with epigean Phreatoicidae, Crenoicus Nicholls, 1944 (south-eastern Australia) and Notamphisopus Nicholls, 1943 (New Zealand). Blindness in epigean taxa is consistent with recolonisation of surface waters from underground refuges. Because Crenoicus is sister-group to the New Zealand clade, and because overseas dispersal between Australia and New Zealand is unlikely, the minimum age for these blind phreatoicids is ~80 million years. This evidence is consistent with a subterranean freshwater fauna surviving the presumed Oligocene inundation of New Zealand.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful to the following people and organisations for their role in this research. Financial support was provided by several Australian Biological Resources Survey grants. Steve Cooper, Andy Austin and Bill Humphreys organised the interesting symposium that led to this paper as part of the Fifth International Southern Connections Conference in Adelaide, 2007. Alex Ritchie kindly prepared the fossil shown in Fig. 3. Steve Keable, Greg Edgecombe and Graham Fenwick worked with me on various projects that provided the background to this paper. Three anonymous referees made helpful suggestions for improving the manuscript.
Bilton D. T.,
Freeland J. R., Okamura B.
(2001) Dispersal in freshwater invertebrates. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 32, 159–181.
| Crossref |
[Verified September 2006.]
McGlone M. S.
(2005) Goodbye Gondwana. Journal of Biogeography 32, 739–740.
| Crossref |
Nelson G., Ladiges P. Y.
(1996) Paralogy in cladistic biogeography and analysis of paralogy-free subtrees. American Museum Novitates 3167, 1–58.
Nicholls G. E.
(1943) The Phreatoicoidea. Part I. The Amphisopidae. Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania 1942, 1–145.
Nicholls G. E.
(1944) The Phreatoicoidea. Part II. The Phreatoicidae. Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania 1943, 1–156.
Schram F. R.
(1970) Isopods from the Pennsylvanian of Illinois. Science 169, 854–855.
| Crossref |
PubMed |
Schram F. R.
(1974) Paleozoic Peracarida of North America. Fieldiana Geology 33, 95–124.
Schram F. R.
(1977) Paleozoogeography of late Paleozoic and Triassic Malacostraca. Systematic Zoology 26, 367–379.
| Crossref |
Stöckler K.,
Daniel I. L., Lockhart P. J.
(2002) New Zealand Kauri (Agathis australis (D.Don) Lindl., Araucariaceae) survives Oligocene drowning. Systematic Biology 51, 827–832.
| Crossref |
PubMed |
Waters J. M., Craw D.
(2006) Goodbye Gondwana? New Zealand Biogeography, Geology, and the Problem of Circularity. Systematic Biology 55, 351–356.
| Crossref |
PubMed |
Wetzer R.
(2001) Hierarchical analysis of mtDNA variation and the use of mtDNA for isopod (Crustacea: Peracarida: Isopoda) systematics. Contributions to Zoology 70, 23–39.
Wetzer R.
(2002) Mitochondrial genes and isopod phylogeny (Peracarida: Isopoda). Journal of Crustacean Biology 22, 1–14.
| Crossref |
Wilson G. D. F., Edgecombe G. D.
(2003) The Triassic isopod Protamphisopus wianamattensis (Chilton) and comparison with extant taxa (Crustacea, Phreatoicidea). Journal of Paleontology 77, 454–470.
| Crossref |
Wilson G. D. F., Fenwick G. D.
(1999) Taxonomy and ecology of Phreatoicus typicus Chilton, 1883 (Crustacea, Isopoda, Phreatoicidae). Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 29, 41–64.
Wilson G. D. F., Ho E. L.
(1996) Crenoicus Nicholls, 1944 (Crustacea, Isopoda, Phreatoicidea): systematics and biology of a new species from New South Wales. Records of the Australian Museum 48, 7–32.
Wilson G. D. F., Keable S. J.
(1999) A new genus of phreatoicidean isopod (Crustacea) from the north Kimberley region, Western Australia. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 126, 51–79.
| Crossref |
Wilson G. D. F., Keable S. J.
(2001) Systematics of the Phreatoicidea. Crustacean Issues 13, 175–194.
Wilson G. D. F., Keable S. J.
(2002) New Phreatoicidea (Crustacea: Isopoda) from Grampians National Park, with revisions of Synamphisopus and Phreatoicopsis. Memoirs of Museum Victoria 59, 457–529.