Date: March 8, 2019
Source: University of Wisconsin-Madison
Blue-blooded
and armored with 10 spindly legs, horseshoe crabs have perhaps always seemed a
bit out of place.
First
thought to be closely related to crabs, lobsters and other crustaceans, in 1881
evolutionary biologist E. Ray Lankester placed them solidly in a group more
similar to spiders and scorpions. Horseshoe crabs have since been thought to be
ancestors of the arachnids, but molecular sequence data have always been sparse
enough to cast doubt.
University
of Wisconsin-Madison evolutionary biologists Jesús Ballesteros and Prashant
Sharma hope, then, that their recent study published in the
journal Systematic Biology helps firmly plant ancient horseshoe crabs
within the arachnid family tree.
By
analyzing troves of genetic data and considering a vast number of possible ways
to examine it, the scientists now have a high degree of confidence that
horseshoe crabs do indeed belong within the arachnids.
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