Artículos de revistas
Phylogeography and biogeography concordance in the marine Gastropod crepipatella dilatata (Calyptraeidae) along the southeastern Pacific Coast
Registro en:
Journal of Heredity 103
1465-7333
Autor
Brante, Antonio
Fernández, Miriam
Viard, Frédérique
Resumen
Artículo de publicación ISI The biogeography and phylogeography concordance hypothesis suggests that the same factors, for instance physical barriers
or environmental gradients, shape both species assemblages and intraspecific genetic structure. In the marine realm,
previous studies have however suggested that phylogeographic patterns are also explained by the life-history strategy of the
species. However, evidence is contradictory and comes mainly from the northern hemisphere, which is characterized by
specific environmental conditions and evolutionary histories of species. In this work, we evaluated the concordance
hypothesis in the southern Pacific using the marine gastropod Crepipatella dilatata as a case study. This intertidal species with
direct development exhibited a restricted dispersal potential, a feature that contrasts with previous species studied in the
same area. Using the gene cytochrome oxidase I, we analyzed 253 individuals sampled at 10 locations covering 543 km of
the coast of Chile. The study sites also incorporated 2 biogeographic regions separated by a well-studied biogeographic
break (at 30S). Populations of C. dilatata displayed a high degree of genetic structure and a perfect match between
phylogeographic and biogeographic breaks at 30S. When comparing our data with previous research over the same
geographic range, life history traits related to dispersal ability seem to be a good proxy for explaining the concordance
between biogeography and phylogeography along the southeastern pacific coast. In addition, in this and other marine
invertebrate species, gene flow limitations across both sides of the 30S break may act as a driver of the speciation process.