Chasing ghosts: The phylogeny of Amaurobioidinae ghost spiders (Araneae, Anyphaenidae)
The family Anyphaenidae, also known as ghost spiders, includes a diverse array of nocturnal cursorial spiders that actively hunt on vegetation. The family is mostly distributed in the Americas and has been traditionally divided into three subfamilies. The mostly tropical and North American Anyphaeni...
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Acceso en línea: | https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03003256_v44_n5_p550_Labarque http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03003256_v44_n5_p550_Labarque |
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paper:paper_03003256_v44_n5_p550_Labarque2023-06-08T15:27:15Z Chasing ghosts: The phylogeny of Amaurobioidinae ghost spiders (Araneae, Anyphaenidae) Labarque, Facundo Martín Soto, Ignacio M. Ramírez, Martín Javier Anyphaenidae Araneae The family Anyphaenidae, also known as ghost spiders, includes a diverse array of nocturnal cursorial spiders that actively hunt on vegetation. The family is mostly distributed in the Americas and has been traditionally divided into three subfamilies. The mostly tropical and North American Anyphaeninae and the Amaurobioidinae, primarily distributed in southern South America, hold the bulk of the diversity, while the Malenellininae includes a single Chilean species. Here, we use a combined morphological and molecular approach to infer the relationships of the subfamily Amaurobioidinae and examine the delimitation of contentious genera. The morphological characters include both genitalic and somatic morphology, whereas molecular data include four markers, two mitochondrial (COI, 16S) and two nuclear (28S, H3). All our analyses agree on the monophyly of Amaurobioidinae, Amaurobioidini, Gayennini, the genera Negayan, Amaurobioides, Josa, Araiya, Arachosia and Monapia, as well as the paraphyly of Anyphaeninae. The total evidence analysis supports the novel placement of Josa as the sister group of both tribes Amaurobioidini and Gayennini, most of the previously known intergeneric relationships within Gayennini, and a clade of Amaurobioidini with a projecting ocular area, including Aysenoides, Axyracrus, Amaurobioides and Aysenia. The sequence data solve the puzzling placement of Philisca puconensis, here transferred to Tomopisthes, and Tasata chiloensis, transferred to Oxysoma. The advantages of the total evidence phylogenetic approach and the evolution of the male copulatory organ are discussed. © 2015 Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Fil:Labarque, F.M. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Soto, E.M. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Ramírez, M.J. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. 2015 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03003256_v44_n5_p550_Labarque http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03003256_v44_n5_p550_Labarque |
institution |
Universidad de Buenos Aires |
institution_str |
I-28 |
repository_str |
R-134 |
collection |
Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA) |
topic |
Anyphaenidae Araneae |
spellingShingle |
Anyphaenidae Araneae Labarque, Facundo Martín Soto, Ignacio M. Ramírez, Martín Javier Chasing ghosts: The phylogeny of Amaurobioidinae ghost spiders (Araneae, Anyphaenidae) |
topic_facet |
Anyphaenidae Araneae |
description |
The family Anyphaenidae, also known as ghost spiders, includes a diverse array of nocturnal cursorial spiders that actively hunt on vegetation. The family is mostly distributed in the Americas and has been traditionally divided into three subfamilies. The mostly tropical and North American Anyphaeninae and the Amaurobioidinae, primarily distributed in southern South America, hold the bulk of the diversity, while the Malenellininae includes a single Chilean species. Here, we use a combined morphological and molecular approach to infer the relationships of the subfamily Amaurobioidinae and examine the delimitation of contentious genera. The morphological characters include both genitalic and somatic morphology, whereas molecular data include four markers, two mitochondrial (COI, 16S) and two nuclear (28S, H3). All our analyses agree on the monophyly of Amaurobioidinae, Amaurobioidini, Gayennini, the genera Negayan, Amaurobioides, Josa, Araiya, Arachosia and Monapia, as well as the paraphyly of Anyphaeninae. The total evidence analysis supports the novel placement of Josa as the sister group of both tribes Amaurobioidini and Gayennini, most of the previously known intergeneric relationships within Gayennini, and a clade of Amaurobioidini with a projecting ocular area, including Aysenoides, Axyracrus, Amaurobioides and Aysenia. The sequence data solve the puzzling placement of Philisca puconensis, here transferred to Tomopisthes, and Tasata chiloensis, transferred to Oxysoma. The advantages of the total evidence phylogenetic approach and the evolution of the male copulatory organ are discussed. © 2015 Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. |
author |
Labarque, Facundo Martín Soto, Ignacio M. Ramírez, Martín Javier |
author_facet |
Labarque, Facundo Martín Soto, Ignacio M. Ramírez, Martín Javier |
author_sort |
Labarque, Facundo Martín |
title |
Chasing ghosts: The phylogeny of Amaurobioidinae ghost spiders (Araneae, Anyphaenidae) |
title_short |
Chasing ghosts: The phylogeny of Amaurobioidinae ghost spiders (Araneae, Anyphaenidae) |
title_full |
Chasing ghosts: The phylogeny of Amaurobioidinae ghost spiders (Araneae, Anyphaenidae) |
title_fullStr |
Chasing ghosts: The phylogeny of Amaurobioidinae ghost spiders (Araneae, Anyphaenidae) |
title_full_unstemmed |
Chasing ghosts: The phylogeny of Amaurobioidinae ghost spiders (Araneae, Anyphaenidae) |
title_sort |
chasing ghosts: the phylogeny of amaurobioidinae ghost spiders (araneae, anyphaenidae) |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03003256_v44_n5_p550_Labarque http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03003256_v44_n5_p550_Labarque |
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1768541609045000192 |