Phylogeography of the pipefish, Urocampus carinirostris, suggests secondary intergradation of ancient lineages


Autoria(s): Chenoweth, S. F.; Hughes, J. M.; Connolly, R. C.
Data(s)

01/09/2002

Resumo

We assayed the pattern of mitoehondrial DNA evolution in the live bearing, seagrass specialist pipefish, Urocampus carinirostris, in eastern Australia. These life history attributes were predicted to result in strong phylogeographic structure in U. carinirostris. Phylogenetic analysis of cytochrome b sequences detected two monophyletic mtDNA clades that differed by 8.69% sequence divergence - a large level of intraspecific divergence for a marine fish. The geographical distribution of clades was non-random and resembled clinal secondary intergradation over a 130-km stretch of coastline. Contrary to phylogeographic predictions, this large phylogeographic break does not occur across a traditionally recognised biogeographic boundary. Analyses of historical demography suggested that individuals belonging to the most widespread clade underwent a population expansion from a small refuge population during the Pleistocene.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:62542

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer-Verlag

Palavras-Chave #Marine & Freshwater Biology #Cytochrome-b Gene #Mitochondrial-dna #Population-growth #Fishes #Marine #Speciation #Evolution #History #Polymorphisms #Substitutions #C1 #270203 Population and Ecological Genetics #630399 Fish not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article