Article
Vol. 61-67, 2022
Phylogeographic Structure within the Fiddler Crabs Leptuca thayeri and Uca maracoani (Brachyura, Ocypodidae) along the Tropical West Atlantic
Murilo Zanetti Marochi*, Marcelo Marucci Pereira Tangerina, Renata de Oliveira Rodrigues, Claudia Laurenzano, Wagner Vilegas, Tânia M. Costa, Christoph D. Schubart
Murilo Zanetti Marochi
UNESP – São Paulo State University, Coastal Campus, São Vicente – SP, Pça. Infante Dom Henrique Square, 11330-900, Brazil.
murilo.marochi@gmail.com
Marcelo Marucci Pereira Tangerina
UNESP – São Paulo State University, Institute of Chemistry, Campus of Araraquara, Araraquara – Prof. Francisco Degni Street, 55, 14800-060, Brazil.
marcelomptang@gmail.com
Renata de Oliveira Rodrigues
UNESP – São Paulo State University, Coastal Campus, São Vicente – SP, Pça. Infante Dom Henrique Square, 11330-900, Brazil.
rodrigues.ro25@gmail.com
Claudia Laurenzano
University of Regensburg, Zoology and Evolutionary Biology, Regensburg, Germany
Universitätsstr. 31, 93053. Tel: +49 941 9433304.
claudialaurenzano@gmail.com
Wagner Vilegas
UNESP – São Paulo State University, Coastal Campus, São Vicente – SP, Pça. Infante Dom Henrique Square, 11330-900, Brazil.
vilegasw@clp.unesp.br
Tânia M. Costa
UNESP – São Paulo State University, Coastal Campus, São Vicente – SP, Pça. Infante Dom Henrique Square, 11330-900, Brazil.
tania.costa@unesp.br
Christoph D. Schubart
University of Regensburg, Zoology and Evolutionary Biology, Regensburg, Germany
Universitätsstr. 31, 93053. Tel: +49 941 9433304.
christoph.schubart@ur.de
Communicated by Hsi-Te Shih

Most fiddler crabs have an extended planktonic larval phase, potentially maintaining gene flow among widely separated populations, in the absence of marine barriers. Such marine barriers could be long coastal stretches without suitable habitat, freshwater plumes caused by large river mouths, or strong currents. Typically, fiddler crabs inhabit mangrove habitats, and as mangroves tend to have a patchy distribution, it is important to gather information on the connectivity between neighboring mangroves and recognize local endemisms. To detect potential genetic differentiation among mangrove-dwelling populations of Leptuca thayeri and Uca maracoani along several thousand kilometers of a tropical coastline, mtDNA sequences of different populations from Brazil and two Caribbean islands were analyzed and compared. As shown in previous studies with fiddler crabs, Brazilian populations are genetically indiscernible, and our data suggest the absence of long-standing gene flow barriers in the two studied species along the Brazilian coast. This includes both sides of the postulated biogeographic barriers  corresponding to the split of the Central South Equatorial Current and to the Amazon River freshwater plume. In contrast, conspecific individuals from the Greater Antilles carried different haplotypes, suggesting a biogeographical barrier between Brazil and the Caribbean, apparently having limited gene flow between both regions for extended time periods.

Keywords

Cox1 mtDNA, Restricted gene flow, Population genetics, Brazil, Caribbean.

About this article
Citation:

Marochi MZ, Tangerina MMP, de Oliveira Rodrigues R, Laurenzano C, Vilegas W, Costa TM, Schubart CD. 2022. Phylogeographic structure within the fiddler crabs Leptuca thayeri and Uca maracoani (Brachyura, Ocypodidae) along the tropical West Atlantic. Zool Stud 61:67. doi:10.6620/ZS.2022.61-67.

( Received 30 December 2021 / Accepted 17 April 2022 / Published 16 November 2022 )
DOI: https://doi.org/10.6620/ZS.2022.61-67