Synxenidae, Silvestri, 1923
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2017.1380241 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8F432469-BA7B-794C-A093-C3C4FBE36B6E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Synxenidae |
status |
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Family Synxenidae View in CoL
The family Synxenidae , represented by the single genus Phryssonotus , is shown to be monophyletic, with strong nodal support (JF 100%/87%; BS 93%) across all analyses. The ML analysis shows strong support for a basal position for the family. Species in this family have 15–17 pairs of legs, in contrast to species in the remaining two families with 13 pairs (11 pairs in one species). Reduction in segments and reduction in leg pairs are considered to be derived traits in the order ( Condé 1970).
Phryssonotus novaehollandiae has been identified from many parts of Australia ( Short and Huynh 2009). The ML analysis and the pairwise distances (Appendix 3) both suggest that South Australian and Western Australian populations (lab numbers 4 and 5) differ from the three Victorian populations (lab numbers 1, 2 and 3). Hence, it seems likely that P. novaehollandiae actually includes more than one species. The ML analysis further indicates that the thelytokous populations (lab numbers 1 and 2, indicated with an asterisk in Figures 2 View Figure 2 and 3 View Figure 3 ) do not form a separate clade from the geographically closest sexually reproducing population, indicating that parthenogenesis may be a recent localised response in the two populations, both of which inhabit a coastal habitat.
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