Steele Craig A, Storfer Andrew
School of Biological Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-4236, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2006 Aug;15(9):2477-87. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2006.02950.x.
Phylogeographic patterns of many taxa are explained by Pleistocene glaciation. The temperate rainforests within the Pacific Northwest of North America provide an excellent example of this phenomenon, and competing phylogenetic hypotheses exist regarding the number of Pleistocene refugia influencing genetic variation of endemic organisms. One such endemic is the Pacific giant salamander, Dicamptodon tenebrosus. In this study, we estimate this species' phylogeny and use a coalescent modeling approach to test five hypotheses concerning the number, location and divergence times of purported Pleistocene refugia. Single refugium hypotheses include: a northern refugium in the Columbia River Valley and a southern refugium in the Klamath-Siskiyou Mountains. Dual refugia hypotheses include these same refugia but separated at varying times: last glacial maximum (20,000 years ago), mid-Pleistocene (800,000 years ago) and early Pleistocene (1.7 million years ago). Phylogenetic analyses and inferences from nested clade analysis reveal distinct northern and southern lineages expanding from the Columbia River Valley and the Klamath-Siskiyou Mountains, respectively. Results of coalescent simulations reject both single refugium hypotheses and the hypothesis of dual refugia with a separation date in the late Pleistocene but not hypotheses predicting dual refugia with separation in early or mid-Pleistocene. Estimates of time since divergence between northern and southern lineages also indicate separation since early to mid-Pleistocene. Tests for expanding populations using mismatch distributions and 'g' distributions reveal demographic growth in the northern and southern lineages. The combination of these results provides strong evidence that this species was restricted into, and subsequently expanded from, at least two Pleistocene refugia in the Pacific Northwest.
许多分类群的系统发育地理格局可以用更新世冰川作用来解释。北美太平洋西北部的温带雨林就是这一现象的一个绝佳例子,关于影响特有生物遗传变异的更新世避难所数量,存在相互竞争的系统发育假说。其中一种特有生物是太平洋巨型蝾螈(Dicamptodon tenebrosus)。在本研究中,我们估计了该物种的系统发育,并采用一种溯祖建模方法来检验关于假定的更新世避难所的数量、位置和分歧时间的五个假说。单一避难所假说包括:哥伦比亚河谷的北部避难所和克拉马斯 - 锡斯基尤山脉的南部避难所。双重避难所假说包括相同的避难所,但在不同时间分开:末次盛冰期(2万年前)、中更新世(80万年前)和早更新世(170万年前)。系统发育分析和嵌套分支分析的推断分别揭示了从哥伦比亚河谷和克拉马斯 - 锡斯基尤山脉扩张而来的不同的北部和南部谱系。溯祖模拟结果拒绝了单一避难所假说以及末次更新世分离的双重避难所假说,但没有拒绝预测早更新世或中更新世分离的双重避难所假说。北部和南部谱系之间分歧时间的估计也表明自早更新世至中更新世以来就已分离。使用错配分布和“g”分布对种群扩张的检验揭示了北部和南部谱系的人口增长。这些结果的结合提供了强有力的证据,表明该物种在更新世至少被限制在太平洋西北部的两个避难所中,随后从这些避难所扩张出来。