Document of bibliographic reference 363104

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Assessing penaeid shrimp diversity in the northwest of Peninsular Malaysia: an integrated framework in taxonomy and phylogeny
Abstract
The taxonomic diversity of penaeid shrimps from the northwest coast of Peninsular Malaysia was investigated based on morphometric and molecular approaches. For geometric morphometrics (GM) approach, eighteen homologous landmarks were analyzed with principal component analysis (PCA) and canonical variate analysis (CVA) in Morpho J software. The morphological variations among species were attributed to body shape, rostrum, carapace head, and telson. The first four components accounted for 87.27% in the PCA, while for CVA, the first three components contributed to 78.47%. Although not absolute, there is a tendency for closely related species to cluster together. The CVA analyses clearly differentiated Metapenaeopsis stridulans, Megokris sedili, Metapenaeus brevicornis and Mierspenaeopsis sculptilis into discrete clusters, and highlighted the closeness of the groups; Mierspenaeopsis sculptilis - M. hardwickii, Penaeus merguiensis - P. semisulcatus, Metapenaeus affinis - M. dobsoni - M. ensis, and Penaeus monodon - P. pulchricaudatus. Molecular phylogeny among these species of penaeid shrimp were examined using mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene sequences. Geometric morphometric analyses revealed shape overlap among the 12 shrimp species, yet significant differences were also detected. The morphometric and molecular multispecies analyses were largely in agreement. The phylogenetic signal was assessed by mapping the morphometric data onto three phylogenetic trees (Neighbour Joining-NJ, Maximum Likelihood-ML, and Bayesian Inference-BI) generated from the partial mitochondrial COI on the same 12 species. Results revealed non-significance (no phylogenetic signal) for NJ but significant phylogenetic signals (evolutionary significance) for ML and BI, suggesting that the shape difference among the penaeid shrimp species investigated was related to their evolutionary history. The NJ tree is prone to errors when dealing with deeper divergence times, whereas ML and BI trees are ideal for phylogeny tree reconstruction, which applies a model of sequence evolution on the data.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000894986000001
Bibliographic citation
Abdul Halim, S.A.A.; Abd Hamid, M.; Idris, I.; Othman, A.S.; Mohd Nor, S.A. (2023). Assessing penaeid shrimp diversity in the northwest of Peninsular Malaysia: an integrated framework in taxonomy and phylogeny. Biologia 78: 791-808. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11756-022-01283-5
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Siti Abdul Halim
author
Name
Muzzalifah Abd Hamid
author
Name
Izwandy Idris
author
Name
Ahmad Othman
author
Name
Siti Mohd Nor

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11756-022-01283-5

Document metadata

date created
2023-04-03
date modified
2023-04-05