Halozetes capensis

Pfingstl, Tobias, Wagner, MaXimilian, Hugo-Coetzee, Julia Baumann Elizabeth A., Neethling, Jan Andries & Bardel-Kahr, Iris, 2022, Contrasting phylogeographic patterns of intertidal mites (Acari, Oribatida) along the South African shoreline, Organisms Diversity & Evolution (New York, N. Y.) 22 (3), pp. 789-801 : 796

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1007/s13127-022-00557-9

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038B87EB-FF83-9D64-FF73-FF61FD4B2584

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Halozetes capensis
status

 

Halozetes capensis View in CoL

In NMDS on H. capensis , males overlapped in raw as well as in size-corrected data, but there was some separation between the females of different populations: the populations from Nature’s Valley and Wilderness were largely separated from the populations from De Hoop and Kayser’s Beach, and this separation was clearer in the size-corrected data ( Fig. 6 View Fig ).

LDAs on females and males, based on raw as well as on size-corrected data, revealed similar patterns ( Fig. 6 View Fig ): in all cases, the two populations from Nature’s Valley and Wilderness were separated from the populations from De Hoop and Kayser’s Beach on axis 1. Axis 2 separated the population from Kayser’s beach from the other populations, whereas a small overlapping area remained in the males. The power of classification by LDA was also similar in all analyses: LDA on females correctly classified 67.8% in raw data and 61.02% in size-corrected data; in males, the percentages were higher with 72.73% correctly classified in raw data and 70.91% in size-corrected data. Thus, in both sexes, more specimens were correctly classified in the raw data.

Variables with highest loadings in females were db and nwdp for axis 1 and dga, al, and aw for axis 2 in the raw data, and gl, db, and nwda for axis 1 and dga and nwdp for axis 2 in the size-corrected data (Supporting Table S3). In males, the variables with highest loadings were db, nwdm, nwdp, and ddis for axis 1 and nwdp, dga, aw, and nwdm for axis 2 in the raw data. In size-corrected data, variables with highest loadings were db and nwda for axis 1 and nwdm and nwdp for axis 2 (Supporting Table S3).

PERMANOVA on both sexes, based on raw as well as on size-corrected data, showed that there were highly significant differences (p <0.001) between at least one of the populations and the others. In pairwise comparisons between the female populations, significant differences (p> 0.05) were encountered between Nature’s Valley and De Hoop and Nature’s Valley and Kayser’s Beach in both raw and size-corrected data. Pairwise comparisons of the male populations (raw as well as size-corrected data) showed significant differences (p <0.01) between all possible pairings except between Wilderness and Nature’s Valley, where no significant differences were present.

Significant differences in the dispersion of populations (p <0.05) were found in the female populations between Wilderness and Nature’s Valley and between Wilderness and De Hoop in the raw data. In size-corrected data of females, significant differences (p <0.01) in dispersion were present only between Wilderness and Nature’s Val - ley. In raw data of the male populations, the dispersion of the populations from Wilderness and Nature’s Valley also differed significantly (p <0.05); there were no significant differences in size-corrected data of males. In all mentioned cases, the population from Wilderness showed smaller dispersion than the other populations.

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF