TL;DR: Freshwater amphipods are greatly polyphyletic, continental invasions have taken place repeatedly in different time frames and regions of the world, and have had great impacts on European fluvial ecosystems.
Abstract: Amphipods are brooding peracaridan crustaceans whose young undergo direct development, with no independent larval dispersal stage. Most species are epibenthic, benthic, or subterranean. There are some 1,870 amphipod species and subspecies recognized from fresh or inland waters worldwide at the end of 2005. This accounts for 20% of the total known amphipod diversity. The actual diversity may still be several-fold. Amphipods are most abundant in cool and temperate environments; they are particularly diversified in subterranean environments and in running waters (fragmented habitats), and in temperate ancient lakes, but are notably rare in the tropics. Of the described freshwater taxa 70% are Palearctic, 13% Nearctic, 7% Neotropical, 6% Australasian and 3% Afrotropical. Approximately 45% of the taxa are subterranean; subterranean diversity is highest in the karst landscapes of Central and Southern Europe (e.g., Niphargidae), North America (Crangonyctidae), and Australia (Paramelitidae). The majority of Palearctic epigean amphipods are in the superfamily Gammaroidea, whereas talitroid amphipods (Hyalella) account for all Neotropic and much of the Nearctic epigean fauna. Major concentrations of endemic species diversity occur in Southern Europe, Lake Baikal, the Ponto-Caspian basin, Southern Australia (including Tasmania), and the south-eastern USA. Endemic family diversity is similarly centered in the Western Palearctic and Lake Baikal. Freshwater amphipods are greatly polyphyletic, continental invasions have taken place repeatedly in different time frames and regions of the world. In the recent decades, human mediated invasions of Ponto-Caspian amphipods have had great impacts on European fluvial ecosystems.
TL;DR: Two new crangonyctoid genera Chydaekata and Molma and sixteen new species are here described, which include 15 new species of stygobiont fauna in the Pilbara region of Western Australia.
Abstract: Sampling of underground waters in association with mining operations in the Pilbara region of Western Australia has revealed a considerable stygobiont fauna, which in waters of low salinity is dominated by c.rangonyctoid amphipoda. Two new crangonyctoid genera Chydaekata and Molma and sixteen new species are here described. Chydaekata includes 15 new species: C. acuminata, C. nudula, C. dolichodactyla, C. breviclava, C. transversa, C. diagonalis, C. carscutica, C. gyraspis, C. simulata, C. tetraspis, C. ovatosetosa, C. anophelma, C. scopula, C. scuticara and C. brachybasis. Molina is monospecific: M. pleobranchos.
TL;DR: A combined approach was utilised, employing molecular markers and morphological characters to assess variation in the new genus and previously described genera of Paramelitidae from the Pilbara, resulting in the description of two new species.
Abstract: The Pilbara region of Western Australia hosts a diverse fauna in the groundwater, the majority being crustaceans. Specimens of a highly morphologically distinct paramelitid amphipod, clearly representing a new genus, were collected from three tributaries of the Fortescue River basin in the Pilbara. The present study utilised a combined approach, employing molecular markers and morphological characters to assess variation in the new genus and previously described genera of Paramelitidae from the Pilbara. Both molecular and morphological analyses confi rmed the distinctiveness of the new specimens, resulting in the description of two new species, Maarrka weeliwollii and M. etheli.