Author:
Balogh Andras,Ngo Lam,Zigler Kirk S.,Dixon Groves
Abstract
AbstractCaves offer selective pressures that are distinct from the surface. Organisms that have evolved to exist under these pressures typically exhibit a suite of convergent characteristics, including a loss or reduction of eyes and pigmentation. As a result, cave-obligate taxa, termed troglobionts, are no longer viable on the surface. This circumstance has led to a “caves as islands” model of troglobiont evolution that predicts extreme genetic divergence between cave populations even across relatively small areas. An effective test of this model would involve (1) common troglobionts from (2) nearby caves in a cave-dense region, (3) good sample sizes per cave, (4) multiple taxa, and (5) genome-wide characterization. With these criteria in mind, we used RAD-seq to genotype an average of ten individuals of the troglobiotic spider Nesticus barri and the troglobiotic beetle Ptomaphagus hatchi, each from four closely located caves (ranging from 3-13 km apart) in the cave-rich southern Cumberland Plateau of Tennessee, USA. Consistent with the caves as islands model, we find that populations from separate caves are indeed highly genetically isolated. In addition, nucleotide diversity was correlated to cave length, suggesting that cave size is a dominant force shaping troglobiont population size and genetic diversity. Our results support the idea of caves as natural laboratories for the study of parallel evolutionary processes.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference54 articles.
1. GitHub (2014) ANGSD. Available from https://github.com/ANGSD/angsd (accessed February 2020)
2. Subterranean phylogeography of freshwater crayfishes shows extensive gene flow and surprisingly large population sizes;Mol Ecol,2005
3. Molecular taxonomy in the dark: Evolutionary history, phylogeography, and diversity of cave crayfish in the subgenus Aviticambarus, genus Cambarus
4. Reproductive seasonality in Nesticus (Araneae: Nesticidae) cave spiders;PLoS One,2016
5. The relationship between cave biodiversity and available habitat;J Biogeogr,2001
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献