期刊
MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
卷 57, 期 2, 页码 598-619出版社
ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2010.06.015
关键词
Asia; Cryptic species; Genetic diversity; Human-mediated dispersal; Panmixia; Range expansion; Widespread species
资金
- Society of Systematic Biologists
- U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB 073199]
- Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles
- American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
- Texas Memorial Museum of the University of Texas
- KU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
- Natural History Museum of the University of Kansas
- NSF [DEB 0328700, 0640967, DEB 602000]
- [DEB 0344430]
- [DEB 0804115]
- [DEB 0743491]
- Direct For Biological Sciences [0640967] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
- Direct For Biological Sciences
- Division Of Environmental Biology [743491] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
- Division Of Environmental Biology [0640967] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
Southeast Asia's widespread species offer unique opportunities to explore the effects of geographical barriers to dispersal on patterns of vertebrate lineage diversification. We analyzed mitochondrial gene sequences (16S rDNA) from a geographically widespread sample of 266 Southeast Asian tree frogs, including 244 individuals of Polypedates leucomystax and its close relatives. Our expectation was that lineages on island archipelagos would exhibit more substantial geographic structure, corresponding to the geological history of terrestrial connectivity in this region, compared to the Asian mainland. Contrary to predictions, we found evidence of numerous highly divergent lineages from a limited area on the Asian mainland, but fewer lineages with shallower divergences throughout oceanic islands of the Philippines and Indonesia. Surprisingly and in numerous instances, lineages in the archipelagos span distinct biogeographical provinces. Phylogeographic analyses identified four major haplotype clades: summary statistics, mismatch distributions, and Bayesian coalescent inference of demography provide support for recent range expansion, population growth, and/or admixture in the Philippine and some Sulawesi populations. We speculate that the current range of P. leucomystax in Southeast Asia is much larger now than in the recent past. Conversion of forested areas to monoculture agriculture and transportation of agricultural products between islands may have facilitated unprecedented population and range expansion in P. leucomystax throughout thousands of islands in the Philippine and Indonesian archipelagos. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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