» Articles » PMID: 19302467

Not Just Vicariance: Phylogeography of a Sonoran Desert Euphorb Indicates a Major Role of Range Expansion Along the Baja Peninsula

Overview
Journal Mol Ecol
Date 2009 Mar 24
PMID 19302467
Citations 18
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

To examine the generality of population-level impacts of ancient vicariance identified for numerous arid-adapted animal taxa along the Baja peninsula, we tested phylogeographical hypotheses in a similarly distributed desert plant, Euphorbia lomelii (Euphorbiaceae). In light of fossil data indicating marked changes in the distributions of Baja floristic assemblages throughout the Holocene and earlier, we also examined evidence for range expansion over more recent temporal scales. Two classes of complementary analytical approaches - hypothesis-testing and hypothesis-generating - were used to exploit phylogeographical signal from chloroplast DNA sequence data and genotypic data from six codominant nuclear intron markers. Sequence data are consistent with a scenario of mid-peninsular vicariance originating c. 1 million years ago (Ma). Alternative vicariance scenarios representing earlier splitting events inferred for some animals (e.g. Isthmus of La Paz inundation, c. 3 Ma; Sea of Cortez formation, c. 5 Ma) were rejected. Nested clade phylogeographical analysis corroborated coalescent simulation-based inferences. Nuclear markers broadened the temporal spectrum over which phylogeographical scenarios could be addressed, and provided strong evidence for recent range expansions along the north-south axis of the Baja peninsula. In contrast to previous plant studies in this region, however, the expansions do not appear to have been in a strictly northward direction. These findings contribute to a growing appreciation of the complexity of organismal responses to past climatic and geological changes - even when taxa have evolved in the same landscape context.

Citing Articles

Population genomics and distribution modeling revealed the history and suggested a possible future of the endemic (Asparagaceae) complex in the Baja California Peninsula.

Klimova A, Gutierrez-Rivera J, Ortega-Rubio A, Eguiarte L Ecol Evol. 2024; 14(7):e70027.

PMID: 39050658 PMC: 11267983. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.70027.


Are 150 km of open sea enough? Gene flow and population differentiation in a bat-pollinated columnar cactus.

Arenas S, Burquez A, Bustamante E, Scheinvar E, Eguiarte L PLoS One. 2023; 18(6):e0282932.

PMID: 37384637 PMC: 10309638. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0282932.


Geographic isolation and long-distance gene flow influence the genetic structure of the blue fan palm Brahea armata (Arecaceae).

Perez-Alquicira J, Wehncke E, Garcia-Loza G, Carstens B, Dominguez C, Perez-Ishiwara R J Plant Res. 2023; 136(3):277-290.

PMID: 36905462 DOI: 10.1007/s10265-023-01445-9.


Wide outcrossing provides functional connectivity for new and old Banksia populations within a fragmented landscape.

Ritchie A, Dyer R, Nevill P, Sinclair E, Krauss S Oecologia. 2019; 190(1):255-268.

PMID: 30919107 DOI: 10.1007/s00442-019-04387-z.


Molecular genetic analysis of two native desert palm genera, and , from the Baja California Peninsula and Guadalupe Island.

Klimova A, Hoffman J, Gutierrez-Rivera J, Leon de la Luz J, Ortega-Rubio A Ecol Evol. 2017; 7(13):4919-4935.

PMID: 28690819 PMC: 5496553. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.3036.