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With an estimated 15,000 described species, Decapoda, including shrimps, lobsters and crabs, is one of the most species-rich and diverse extant group of crustaceans. We have worked on the phylogeny and evolution of decapods for almost 20 years. My team is the first group who extensively applied nuclear protein-coding gene markers in decapod phylogeny (Tsang et al 2008). We have robustly resolved the phylogeny of multiple decapod taxa and published several highly cited papers (e.g. Tsang et al 2011, 2014). We have also published the first phylogenomic work in crabs (Ma et al 2019). 

 

Beyond the higher taxonomic level phylogenetic reconstruction, we are also interested in investigating how trait evolution drives diversification in decapod, target organisms include terrestrial crabs (Tsang et al 2022), symbiotic crabs (Chow et al 2023) and shrimps (Chow et al 2019, 2021). We plan to reconstruct a fully dated genus-level molecular phylogeny for the Order Decapoda to elucidate their tempo and mode of speciation, based on a time-calibrated family-level phylogenomic backbone tree combined with a genus-level supermatrix containing >7,000 species using backbone-and-patch approach combined with taxonomy to achieve a fully dated decapod phylogeny. We would reconstruct the trait transition history and conduct trait dependent speciation rate analyses to identify the shift(s) in diversification rate in respect to ecological niche innovation, latitudinal & bathymetric distribution, and biographical history.

 

We hope our work would illuminate the pattern and drivers promoting speciation in the marine realm and establish a phylogenetic-informed natural classification scheme for the Order Decapoda.

Phylogeny and evolution of Decapoda Crustacea

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Evolution of mangrove crabs

RS1b. Etisus laevimanus (1).jpg

Etisus laevimanus

RS1c. Charybdis japonica.jpg

Charybdis (Charybdis) japonica

RS1d. Macrophthalmus definitus (1).jpg

Macrophthalmus (Mareotis) definitus

Actumnus setifer_field CAT423_SI_J16A2881_chandler (1).jpg

Actumnus setifer

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Orisarma dehaani

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Simon F.S. Li Marine Science Laboratory
The Chinese University of Hong Kong 
Hong Kong SAR

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