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Population structure and phylogeography reveal pathways of colonization by a migratory marine reptile (<scp>C</scp>helonia mydas) in the central and eastern Pacific

Authors :
Adriana Laura Sarti‐Martinez
Amy Frey
Omar Chassin-Noria
Michael P. Jensen
Elizabeth Vélez
George H. Balazs
Peter H. Dutton
Patricia Zárate
Erin L. LaCasella
Source :
Ecology and Evolution
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Wiley, 2014.

Abstract

Climate, behavior, ecology, and oceanography shape patterns of biodiversity in marine faunas in the absence of obvious geographic barriers. Marine turtles are an example of highly migratory creatures with deep evolutionary lineages and complex life histories that span both terrestrial and marine environments. Previous studies have focused on the deep isolation of evolutionary lineages (&gt;3 mya) through vicariance; however, little attention has been given to the pathways of colonization of the eastern Pacific and the processes that have shaped diversity within the most recent evolutionary time. We sequenced 770 bp of the mtDNA control region to examine the stock structure and phylogeography of 545 green turtles from eight different rookeries in the central and eastern Pacific. We found significant differentiation between the geographically separated nesting populations and identified five distinct stocks (F ST = 0.08-0.44, P &lt; 0.005). Central and eastern Pacific Chelonia mydas form a monophyletic group containing 3 subclades, with Hawaii more closely related to the eastern Pacific than western Pacific populations. The split between sampled central/eastern and western Pacific haplotypes was estimated at around 0.34 mya, suggesting that the Pacific region west of Hawaii has been a more formidable barrier to gene flow in C. mydas than the East Pacific Barrier. Our results suggest that the eastern Pacific was colonized from the western Pacific via the Central North Pacific and that the Revillagigedos Islands provided a stepping-stone for radiation of green turtles from the Hawaiian Archipelago to the eastern Pacific. Our results fit with a broader paradigm that has been described for marine biodiversity, where oceanic islands, such as Hawaii and Revillagigedo, rather than being peripheral evolutionary &quot;graveyards&quot;, serve as sources and recipients of diversity and provide a mechanism for further radiation.

Details

ISSN :
20457758
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ecology and Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....56e7ecce25ad102bf24426463e9ba431
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1269