Broad-Scale Climatic Gradients Drive Multiple Facets of Scorpion Beta Diversity in Northeastern Brazil

  Broad-Scale Climatic Gradients Drive Multiple Facets of Scorpion Beta Diversity in Northeastern Brazil ABSTRACT Aim Beta diversity analyses clarify mechanisms structuring ecological communities, but their multidimensional facets remain poorly explored in arthropods. Here, we quantified taxonomic, phylogenetic, and functional beta diversity in scorpions, partitioned these facets into species replacement and richness differences, and evaluated the relative importance of spatial structure and environmental conditions in driving community assembly. Location Northeastern Brazil, South America. Taxon Scorpions (Arachnida: Scorpiones). Methods Taxonomic beta diversity was estimated using species presence across 70 sites in northeastern Brazil. Phylogenetic turnover was calculated from a multi-locus molecular tree, and functional beta diversity was derived from morphometric and ecological traits. All beta diversity facets were decomposed into replacement and richness-difference component...

Low coverage whole genome sequencing reveals a new subfamily of daddy long-legs spiders from Brazilian Caatinga (Araneae: Pholcidae)

 


Low coverage whole genome sequencing reveals a new subfamily of daddy long-legs spiders from Brazilian Caatinga (Araneae: Pholcidae)

Abstract

Pholcid spiders have long been classified into five subfamilies, and this framework ultimately dates back to Eugène Simon’s non-phylogenetic system of 1893. While subfamily relationships and compositions have been updated extensively over the last decades, no new subfamily had to be erected for any of the hundreds of new species newly described since Simon. Here we report two new species from semi-arid Brazilian Caatinga: Caipira mineira Huber sp. nov., and Caipira baiana Huber sp. nov. Genomic data strongly support their sister-group relationship; we thus join them conservatively in a single genus, Caipira Huber gen. nov., even though they show some remarkable morphological differences. This genus is sister to a large clade including all pholcid subfamilies except Pholcinae and Smeringopinae, which necessitates the erection of a new subfamily: Caipirinae subfam. nov. In addition, we formalize the separation of the genus Artema from ‘other Arteminae’. This had previously been suggested by multi-locus genetic data, and is strongly supported by new genomic data. Arteminae is newly circumscribed to include only Artema and Priscula, and the name Physocyclinae subfam. nov. is proposed for ‘other Arteminae’. Pholcidae is thus divided into seven subfamilies, with the following relationships suggested by genomic data: (PholcinaeSmeringopinae), (Caipirinae, ((ArteminaeNinetinae), (PhysocyclinaeModisiminae))). Finally, we tested the hypothesis that the Chilean genus Aucana is the closest relative of the new Brazilian species. This is strongly rejected; Aucana is resolved as the only known South American representative of Physocyclinae.

Meng G, Carvalho LS, Podsiadlowski L, Huber BA (2026) Low coverage whole genome sequencing reveals a new subfamily of daddy long-legs spiders from Brazilian Caatinga (Araneae: Pholcidae). Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 84: 95-121. https://doi.org/10.3897/asp.84.e174748