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1 August 2006 MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETIC EVIDENCE FOR THE PARALLEL EVOLUTION OF ROCK ECOMORPHS IN THE NEW ZEALAND ORB-WEAVING SPIDER WAITKERA WAITAKERENSIS (FAMILY ULOBORIDAE)
Brent D. Opell
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The genus Waitkera is the only New Zealand representative of the family Uloboridae and is known from a single species, Waitkera waitakerensis. This species is found in forests of the North Island, where it constructs orb-webs on understory vegetation. Rock outcrops in the Northland region support populations of W. waitkerensis comprised of larger individuals than those found elsewhere on the island, including those in surrounding forests. Parsimony analyses of DNA sequences from the mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase subunit ND1, using Siratoba refernes, another basal uloborid, as an outgroup, did not delineate these rock-dwelling populations as a monophyletic lineage that could be regarded as a distinct species. A TCS analysis leads to the same conclusion, suggesting that rock-dwelling populations represent independently evolved ecotypes. Northland populations of W. waitakerensis are phylogenetically basal; indicating that the species' range contracted northward during the Pleistocene and recolonized the remainder of the North Island.

Brent D. Opell "MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETIC EVIDENCE FOR THE PARALLEL EVOLUTION OF ROCK ECOMORPHS IN THE NEW ZEALAND ORB-WEAVING SPIDER WAITKERA WAITAKERENSIS (FAMILY ULOBORIDAE)," The Journal of Arachnology 34(2), 467-475, (1 August 2006). https://doi.org/10.1636/04-94.1
Received: 16 November 2004; Published: 1 August 2006
KEYWORDS
Araneae
ND1 mitochondrial DNA
nested clade analysis
PHYLOGEOGRAPHY
Uloboridae
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