[eng] Amphiglena mediterranea Leydig, 1851 (Annelida: Sabellidae) was described from shallow rocky
bottoms in Nice, France. For over a century it was the only species in the genus reported in the
Mediterranean Sea. Recent studies in the Italian coast evidenced there are lineages compatible with
the unified species concept hidden under an apparently similar morphological group. In order to
determine Amphiglena diversity from several understudied localities along the Western Mediterranean
and North-East Atlantic, an integrative approach for species delimitation combining genetic,
morphological and also geographical data, was implemented. This represents the first integrative study
in Amphiglena and the largest genetic study conducted within the genus to date. The mitochondrial
gene cytochrome C oxidase subunit I (COI), the so-called universal barcoding gene for animals, of 90
Amphiglena specimens were analyzed. The genetic approach included phylogenetic analyses
(Bayesian inference and Maximum Likelihood), and different distance and tree based molecular
species delimitation tools (ABGD, ASAP, and PTP, bPTP, mPTP and statistical parsimony haplotype
network). The morphological approach included different microscopic techniques (microscopy and
SEM) and staining methods. In addition, multivariate analyses (PCA and PCoA) were performed to
identify morphological diagnostic attributes for the molecular lineages. Seven undescribed
Amphiglena genetic lineages compatible with the unified species concept were found in this study
adding to the other seven species already reported in the Italian coasts and Madeira. Western
Mediterranean species showed restricted and, in some cases, sympatric distributions, indicating no
genetic flow between taxa regardless proximity. Morphological features overlapped in certain
molecular groups and only five morphogroups were identified. One morphogroup, included three
lineages, and showed very similar morphology with the original description of A. mediterranea. This
study reveals that the genus Amphiglena holds a vast genetic and morphological diversity that has been
overlooked over the years. In addition, members of the A. mediterranea species complex shows
restricted distributions and have not apparently been unintentionally translocated, as expected being a
common shallow water species, able to settle and stablish populations quickly on hard substrates
including artificial substrates and anthropogenic environments.