期刊
MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
卷 58, 期 2, 页码 283-296出版社
ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2010.11.015
关键词
Fucus spiralis; Fucus vesiculosus; Hybridization; Ice ages; Introgression; Phylogeography
资金
- FCT, Portugal
- FEDER
- European Union through the NEST [043251]
- FP6 Networks of Excellence Marine-Genomics-Europe [GOCE-CT-2004-505403]
- MARBEF-Marine Biodiversity and Conservation [GOCE-CT-2003-505446]
We examined 733 individuals of Fucus spiralis from 21 locations and 1093 Fucus vesiculosus individuals from 37 locations throughout their northern hemisphere ranges using nuclear and mitochondrial markers. Three genetic entities of F. spiralis were recovered. In northern and sympatric populations, the presence of F. spiralis Low in the mid-intertidal and F. spiralis High in the high-intertidal was confirmed and both co-occurred with the sister species F. vesiculosus. The third and newly-discovered entity, F. spiralis South, was present mainly in the southern range, where it did not co-occur with F. vesiculosus. The South entity diverged early in allopatry, then hybridized with F. vesiculosus in sympatry to produce F. spiralis Low. Ongoing parallel evolution of F. spiralis Low and F. spiralis High is most likely due to habitat preference/local selection and maintained by preferentially selfing reproductive strategies. Contemporary populations of F. spiralis throughout the North Atlantic stem from a glacial refugium around Brittany involving F. spiralis High; F. spiralis South was probably unaffected by glacial episodes. Exponential population expansion for F. vesiculosus began during the Cromer and/Holstein interglacial period (300,000-200,000 yrs BP). Following the last glacial maximum (30,000-22,000 yrs BP), a single mtDNA haplotype from a glacial refugium in SW Ireland colonized Scandinavia, the Central Atlantic islands, and the W Atlantic. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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