How dispersal rates depend on the prey capture strategy: A case study of Georgia's spiders

Author:

Tarkhnishvili David1ORCID,Seropian Armen1ORCID,Erhardt Christoph2,Kachlishvili Nino1ORCID,Krammer Hans‐Joachim2ORCID,Hein Nils2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Ecology Ilia State University Tbilisi Georgia

2. LIB – Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change, Biodiversity Center Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig Bonn Germany

Abstract

AbstractLarge‐scale barcoding projects help to aggregate information on genetic variability of multiple species throughout their ranges. Comparing DNA sequences of both non‐conspecific and conspecific individuals from distant parts of their ranges helps to compare level of genetic isolation‐by‐distance patterns in different species and adaptive types. We compared mitochondrial CO1 gene sequences of 223 spiders from Georgia (Caucasus), representing 124 species and eight families, with 3097 homological sequences from spiders mostly from Europe, but also from other parts of the World. In most families, a significant isolation‐by distance pattern was observed on family level. On species level, a significant isolation‐by‐distance was observed in 40 species, although this low proportion is most likely related to a lack of data. Simultaneously, remarkable differences in spatial structure were shown for different species. Although the majority of the studied species have a broad western Palearctic range, web‐building spiders from families Araneidae, Theridiidae, and Linyphiidae are less isolated spatially than flower spiders (Thomisidae), jumping spiders (Salticidae), wolf spiders (Lycosidae), sac spiders (Clubionidae), and ground spiders (Gnaphosidae). This pattern is related with more common ballooning in web building than in actively hunting spiders, which commonly remain isolated since preglacial time. Ground spiders build the most isolated populations in the Caucasus.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

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