Literature DB >> 21073591

Inferring the colonization of a mountain range--refugia vs. nunatak survival in high alpine ground beetles.

Konrad Lohse1, James A Nicholls, Graham N Stone.   

Abstract

It has long been debated whether high alpine specialists survived ice ages in situ on small ice-free islands of habitat, so-called nunataks, or whether glacial survival was restricted to larger massifs de refuge at the periphery. We evaluate these alternative hypotheses in a local radiation of high alpine carabid beetles (genus Trechus) in the Orobian Alps, Northern Italy. While summits along the northern ridge of this mountain range were surrounded by the icesheet as nunataks during the last glacial maximum, southern areas remained unglaciated. We analyse a total of 1366 bp of mitochondrial (Cox1 and Cox2) data sampled from 150 individuals from twelve populations and 530 bp of nuclear (PEPCK) sequence sampled for a subset of 30 individuals. Using Bayesian inference, we estimate ancestral location states in the gene trees, which in turn are used to infer the most likely order of recolonization under a model of sequential founder events from a massif de refuge from the mitochondrial data. We test for the paraphyly expected under this model and for reciprocal monophyly predicted by a contrasting model of prolonged persistence of nunatak populations. We find that (i) only three populations are incompatible with the paraphyly of the massif de refuge model, (ii) both mitochondrial and nuclear data support separate refugial origins for populations on the western and eastern ends of the northern ridge, and (iii) mitochondrial node ages suggest persistence on the northern ridge for part of the last ice age.
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21073591     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2010.04929.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  9 in total

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Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-05-18       Impact factor: 17.694

2.  The probability of reciprocal monophyly of gene lineages in three and four species.

Authors:  Rohan S Mehta; Noah A Rosenberg
Journal:  Theor Popul Biol       Date:  2018-05-03       Impact factor: 1.570

3.  Molecular phylogeny of the Trechus brucki group, with description of two new species from the Pyreneo-Cantabrian area (France, Spain) (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Trechinae).

Authors:  Arnaud Faille; Charles Bourdeau; Javier Fresneda
Journal:  Zookeys       Date:  2012-08-28       Impact factor: 1.546

4.  Population explosion in the yellow-spined bamboo locust Ceracris kiangsu and inferences for the impact of human activity.

Authors:  Zhou Fan; Guo-Fang Jiang; Yu-Xiang Liu; Qi-Xin He; Benjamin Blanchard
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-03-06       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  An explicit test of Pleistocene survival in peripheral versus nunatak refugia in two high mountain plant species.

Authors:  Da Pan; Karl Hülber; Wolfgang Willner; Gerald M Schneeweiss
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2019-12-12       Impact factor: 6.185

6.  Differentiation patterns of emperor moths (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae: Saturniinae) of a continental island: divergent evolutionary history driven by Pleistocene glaciations.

Authors:  Wen-Bin Yeh; Cheng-Lung Tsai; Thai-Hong Pham; Shipher Wu; Chia-Wei Chang; Hong-Minh Bui
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2022-04-18       Impact factor: 3.061

7.  Extensive range persistence in peripheral and interior refugia characterizes Pleistocene range dynamics in a widespread Alpine plant species (Senecio carniolicus, Asteraceae).

Authors:  Pedro Escobar García; Manuela Winkler; Ruth Flatscher; Michaela Sonnleitner; Jana Krejčíková; Jan Suda; Karl Hülber; Gerald M Schneeweiss; Peter Schönswetter
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2012-01-25       Impact factor: 6.185

8.  A comparative phylogeographic study reveals discordant evolutionary histories of alpine ground beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae).

Authors:  Yi-Ming Weng; Man-Miao Yang; Wen-Bin Yeh
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2016-02-26       Impact factor: 2.912

9.  X-ray microscopy reveals endophallic structures in a new species of the ground beetle genus Trechus Clairville, 1806 from Baltic amber (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Trechini).

Authors:  Joachim Schmidt; Igor Belousov; Peter Michalik
Journal:  Zookeys       Date:  2016-09-01       Impact factor: 1.546

  9 in total

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