Red coloration is a widely distributed phenotype among animals, yet the pigmentary and genetic bases for this phenotype have been described in relatively few taxa. Here we show that the Hawaiian endemic anchialine shrimp is red because of the accumulation of astaxanthin. Laboratory colonies of phylogenetically distinct lineages of have colony-specific amounts of astaxanthin that are developmentally, and likely genetically, fixed. Carotenoid supplementation and restriction experiments failed to change astaxanthin content from the within-colony baseline levels, suggesting that dietary limitation is not a major factor driving coloration differences. A possible candidate gene product predicted to be responsible for the production of astaxanthin in and other crustaceans is closely related to the bifunctional cytochrome P450 family 3 enzyme found in fungi. However, homologs to the enzyme thought to catalyze ketolation reactions in birds and turtles, , were not found. This work is one of the first steps in linking phenotypic variation in red coloration of to genotypic variation. Future work should focus on (1) pinpointing the genes that function in the bioconversion of dietary carotenoids to astaxanthin, (2) examining what genomic variants might drive variation in coloration among discrete lineages, and (3) testing more explicitly for condition-dependent carotenoid coloration in crustaceans.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/708625DOI Listing

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