Leptocheliidae, Lang, 1973
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.jcz.2023.06.006 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/780187FD-0B7A-FFB6-FC94-FC53FD770B12 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Leptocheliidae |
status |
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3.2. COI-based phylogeny within Leptocheliidae View in CoL
Most phylogenetic relationships in our COI tree ( Fig. 13 View Fig ) show faint support, but six moderately or strongly supported clades are evident:
Clade A contains the other five clades; Clade A1; Clade A2 contains Clade A2α; and Clade A3 contains Clade A3α. Clade A, comprising all leptocheliid species except C. sublitoralis sp. nov., is moderately well supported (SH-aLRT = 98.2%; UFBoot = 88%). Clade A1 is highly supported (SH-aLRT = 99.9%; UFBoot = 99%). Clade A2 (SH-aLRT = 99.1%; UFBoot = 100%) contains two Chondrochelia species from Middle America and a Hargeria clade (Clade A2α). Clade A3 is moderately well supported (SH-aLRT = 95.7%; UFBoot = 86%) and includes three leptocheliine species— N. japonica from Japan, Leptochelia forresti ( Stebbing, 1896) from Florida, USA (its type locality is Antigua and Barbuda in the Caribbean; Stebbing, 1896), and “ Leptochelia longichelipes ” from Belize (this species name is not available; see Jarquín-- Gonzalez´et al., 2015)—along with a Konariinae clade (Clade A3α). Leptocheliinae and Chondrochelia were not monophyletic in our tree.
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