The Mediterranean Sea is one of the major reservoirs of marine biodiversity and harbors an exceptionally high number of endemicspecies. Nevertheless, the taxonomic status of many of these endemics still requires confirmation through integrative, modernapproaches. We hereby first investigated the identity and status of a rare and endemic box crab, known either as Calappa rosea orCalappa rissoana, through a multidisciplinary approach that capitalized on the use of nomenclatural rules, museology, integrativetaxonomic approaches (morphology, complete mitochondrial genomes, nuclear markers, and phylogenetic analyses), and passivecitizen science. Almost all morphological characters failed to differentiate it from the related species Calappa granulata, whereasdifferences in coloration were mostly confirmed here. However, all molecular approaches supported the conspecificity of these twotaxa. The combined use of passive citizen science and statistical analyses revealed that the formerly endemic species is an unrecognizedontogenetic stage of C. granulata, and, in particular, a rare transitional phase that connects early juveniles to fully developed adults. Thisrenders the investigated taxon a new junior synonym of C. granulata and solves nomenclatural and taxonomic ambiguities related tonative Mediterranean box crabs, which have remained unsettled for over 200 years. The present study, therefore, provides the firstcomprehensive reconstruction of the ontogenetic changes occurring in the common Mediterranean box crab throughout its various lifestages and raises questions on whether these transitions occur worldwide across box crabs or are restricted to a few species. Finally, itpresents new, conspicuous, and detailed morphological and molecular data on the type species of the genus Calappa, facilitating futurephylogenetic reconstructions and taxonomic assignments within the entire family Calappidae, and discusses the putative occurrence ofthe other box crabs in the area, suggesting a critical re-evaluation of all historical data and records
On the Fallacy of Color Discrimination: The Rise and Fall of a Rare and Endemic Box Crab (Brachyura: Calappidae) / Tanduo, Valentina; Innocenti, Gianna; Fratini, Sara; Rizzo, Lucia; Crocetta, Fabio. - In: JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGICAL SYSTEMATICS AND EVOLUTIONARY RESEARCH. - ISSN 0947-5745. - ELETTRONICO. - 2026:(2026), pp. 1-20. [10.1155/jzs/9081531]
On the Fallacy of Color Discrimination: The Rise and Fall of a Rare and Endemic Box Crab (Brachyura: Calappidae)
Innocenti, Gianna;Fratini, Sara;
2026
Abstract
The Mediterranean Sea is one of the major reservoirs of marine biodiversity and harbors an exceptionally high number of endemicspecies. Nevertheless, the taxonomic status of many of these endemics still requires confirmation through integrative, modernapproaches. We hereby first investigated the identity and status of a rare and endemic box crab, known either as Calappa rosea orCalappa rissoana, through a multidisciplinary approach that capitalized on the use of nomenclatural rules, museology, integrativetaxonomic approaches (morphology, complete mitochondrial genomes, nuclear markers, and phylogenetic analyses), and passivecitizen science. Almost all morphological characters failed to differentiate it from the related species Calappa granulata, whereasdifferences in coloration were mostly confirmed here. However, all molecular approaches supported the conspecificity of these twotaxa. The combined use of passive citizen science and statistical analyses revealed that the formerly endemic species is an unrecognizedontogenetic stage of C. granulata, and, in particular, a rare transitional phase that connects early juveniles to fully developed adults. Thisrenders the investigated taxon a new junior synonym of C. granulata and solves nomenclatural and taxonomic ambiguities related tonative Mediterranean box crabs, which have remained unsettled for over 200 years. The present study, therefore, provides the firstcomprehensive reconstruction of the ontogenetic changes occurring in the common Mediterranean box crab throughout its various lifestages and raises questions on whether these transitions occur worldwide across box crabs or are restricted to a few species. Finally, itpresents new, conspicuous, and detailed morphological and molecular data on the type species of the genus Calappa, facilitating futurephylogenetic reconstructions and taxonomic assignments within the entire family Calappidae, and discusses the putative occurrence ofthe other box crabs in the area, suggesting a critical re-evaluation of all historical data and records| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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