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Main Authors: Rouzé, Héloïse, Knowlton, Nancy, Anker, Arthur, Hurt, Carla, Wirshing, Herman H, Van Wormhoudt, Alain, Leray, Matthieu
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: iScience 2024
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39474063/
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author Rouzé, Héloïse
Knowlton, Nancy
Anker, Arthur
Hurt, Carla
Wirshing, Herman H
Van Wormhoudt, Alain
Leray, Matthieu
author_facet Rouzé, Héloïse
Knowlton, Nancy
Anker, Arthur
Hurt, Carla
Wirshing, Herman H
Van Wormhoudt, Alain
Leray, Matthieu
Rouzé, Héloïse
Knowlton, Nancy
Anker, Arthur
Hurt, Carla
Wirshing, Herman H
Van Wormhoudt, Alain
Leray, Matthieu
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents An integrative phylogeography for inferring cryptic speciation in the species complex, an important coral mutualist. Rouzé, Héloïse Knowlton, Nancy Anker, Arthur Hurt, Carla Wirshing, Herman H Van Wormhoudt, Alain Leray, Matthieu We use molecular analyses, color patterns, and records of distribution of mating pairs to reconstruct the global phylogeography of , a complex of cryptic coral-associated snapping shrimp species. Molecular data support the delineation of ancestral clades A, B, and C, and suggest five additional subdivisions within clades A and B. Clades A, B1, B2, and C exhibit color pattern differences and/or evidence of assortative mating, and thus merit species-level recognition. There is no evidence for assortative mating within clades A and B1, with likely reproductive compatibility (i.e., fertile clutches) in areas of sympatry. The clade diversity peaks in the Mariana Islands and the early branching clade C is restricted to the northern periphery of the Central and Western Pacific suggesting a Pacific origin of this group outside of the Coral Triangle. These findings underscore the prevalence of allopatric processes with possible ecological or microallopatric speciation in areas where clades overlap.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_39474063
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2024
publisher iScience
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle An integrative phylogeography for inferring cryptic speciation in the species complex, an important coral mutualist.
Rouzé, Héloïse
Knowlton, Nancy
Anker, Arthur
Hurt, Carla
Wirshing, Herman H
Van Wormhoudt, Alain
Leray, Matthieu
An integrative phylogeography for inferring cryptic speciation in the species complex, an important coral mutualist. Rouzé, Héloïse Knowlton, Nancy Anker, Arthur Hurt, Carla Wirshing, Herman H Van Wormhoudt, Alain Leray, Matthieu We use molecular analyses, color patterns, and records of distribution of mating pairs to reconstruct the global phylogeography of , a complex of cryptic coral-associated snapping shrimp species. Molecular data support the delineation of ancestral clades A, B, and C, and suggest five additional subdivisions within clades A and B. Clades A, B1, B2, and C exhibit color pattern differences and/or evidence of assortative mating, and thus merit species-level recognition. There is no evidence for assortative mating within clades A and B1, with likely reproductive compatibility (i.e., fertile clutches) in areas of sympatry. The clade diversity peaks in the Mariana Islands and the early branching clade C is restricted to the northern periphery of the Central and Western Pacific suggesting a Pacific origin of this group outside of the Coral Triangle. These findings underscore the prevalence of allopatric processes with possible ecological or microallopatric speciation in areas where clades overlap.
title An integrative phylogeography for inferring cryptic speciation in the species complex, an important coral mutualist.
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39474063/