Keywords

systematics, crayfish, conservation biology, population genetic, molecular evolution

Abstract

Freshwater crayfish have served as model organisms for over 125 years in scientific research, from areas such as neurobiology and vision research to conservation biology and evolution. Recently, evolutionary histories in the form of phylogenies have served as a critical foundation for testing hypotheses in such diverse research areas as well. In this article, I review the amazing diversity of freshwater crayfish, especially in a phylogenetic context and explore how these evolutionary histories have informed crayfish biology and can be used powerfully in the future to guide research in a diversity of areas. Throughout the article, I draw on examples from my own laboratory in molecular evolution, vision research, systematics, population genetics, and conservation biology.

Original Publication Citation

Bulletin Fransais de la Pache et de la Pisciculture 38-381 (26) 953-964.

Document Type

Peer-Reviewed Article

Publication Date

2005-11-22

Permanent URL

http://hdl.lib.byu.edu/1877/2003

Publisher

EDP Sciences

Language

English

College

Life Sciences

Department

Biology

Included in

Biology Commons

Share

COinS