Literature DB >> 23163292

Sea level, topography and island diversity: phylogeography of the Puerto Rican Red-eyed Coquí, Eleutherodactylus antillensis.

Brittany S Barker1, Javier A Rodríguez-Robles, Vani S Aran, Ashley Montoya, Robert B Waide, Joseph A Cook.   

Abstract

Quaternary climatic oscillations caused changes in sea level that altered the size, number and degree of isolation of islands, particularly in land-bridge archipelagoes. Elucidating the demographic effects of these oscillations increases our understanding of the role of climate change in shaping evolutionary processes in archipelagoes. The Puerto Rican Bank (PRB) (Puerto Rico and the Eastern Islands, which comprise Vieques, Culebra, the Virgin Islands and associated islets) in the eastern Caribbean Sea periodically coalesced during glaciations and fragmented during interglacial periods of the quaternary. To explore population-level consequences of sea level changes, we studied the phylogeography of the frog Eleutherodactylus antillensis across the archipelago. We tested hypotheses encompassing vicariance and dispersal narratives by sequencing mtDNA (c. 552 bp) of 285 individuals from 58 localities, and four nuDNA introns (totalling c. 1633 bp) from 173 of these individuals. We found low support for a hypothesis of divergence of the Eastern Islands populations prior to the start of the penultimate interglacial c. 250 kya, and higher support for a hypothesis of colonization of the Eastern Islands from sources in eastern Puerto Rico during the penultimate and last glacial period, when a land bridge united the PRB. The Río Grande de Loíza Basin in eastern Puerto Rico delineates a phylogeographic break. Haplotypes shared between the PRB and St. Croix (an island c. 105 km south-east of this archipelago) likely represent human-mediated introductions. Our findings illustrate how varying degrees of connectivity and isolation influence the evolution of tropical island organisms.
© 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23163292     DOI: 10.1111/mec.12020

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


  5 in total

1.  A comparative study on genetic effects of artificial and natural habitat fragmentation on Loropetalum chinense (Hamamelidaceae) in Southeast China.

Authors:  N Yuan; H P Comes; Y N Cao; R Guo; Y H Zhang; Y X Qiu
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2014-12-17       Impact factor: 3.821

2.  ORIGINS AND GENETIC DIVERSITY OF INTRODUCED POPULATIONS OF THE PUERTO RICAN RED-EYED COQUÍ, ELEUTHERODACTYLUS ANTILLENSIS, IN SAINT CROIX (U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS) AND PANAMÁ.

Authors:  Brittany S Barker; Javier A Rodríguez-Robles
Journal:  Copeia       Date:  2017-06-02       Impact factor: 1.402

3.  Climate as a driver of tropical insular diversity: comparative phylogeography of two ecologically distinctive frogs in Puerto Rico.

Authors:  Brittany S Barker; Javier A Rodríguez-Robles; Joseph A Cook
Journal:  Ecography (Cop.)       Date:  2015-02-25       Impact factor: 5.992

4.  Phylogeography of the sand dune ant Mycetophylax simplex along the Brazilian Atlantic Forest coast: remarkably low mtDNA diversity and shallow population structure.

Authors:  Danon Clemes Cardoso; Maykon Passos Cristiano; Mara Garcia Tavares; Christoph D Schubart; Jürgen Heinze
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2015-06-10       Impact factor: 3.260

5.  The geography of evolutionary divergence in the highly endemic avifauna from the Sierra Madre del Sur, Mexico.

Authors:  Alberto Rocha-Méndez; Luis A Sánchez-González; Clementina González; Adolfo G Navarro-Sigüenza
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2019-12-30       Impact factor: 3.260

  5 in total

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