Opatova Vera, Arnedo Miquel A
Institut de Recerca de la Biodiversitat & Departament de Biologia Animal, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
PLoS One. 2014 Dec 10;9(12):e115078. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0115078. eCollection 2014.
Studies conducted on volcanic islands have greatly contributed to our current understanding of how organisms diversify. The Canary Islands archipelago, located northwest of the coast of northern Africa, harbours a large number of endemic taxa. Because of their low vagility, mygalomorph spiders are usually absent from oceanic islands. The spider Titanidiops canariensis, which inhabits the easternmost islands of the archipelago, constitutes an exception to this rule. Here, we use a multi-locus approach that combines three mitochondrial and four nuclear genes to investigate the origins and phylogeography of this remarkable trap-door spider. We provide a timeframe for the colonisation of the Canary Islands using two alternative approaches: concatenation and species tree inference in a Bayesian relaxed clock framework. Additionally, we investigate the existence of cryptic species on the islands by means of a Bayesian multi-locus species delimitation method. Our results indicate that T. canariensis colonised the Canary Islands once, most likely during the Miocene, although discrepancies between the timeframes from different approaches make the exact timing uncertain. A complex evolutionary history for the species in the archipelago is revealed, which involves two independent colonisations of Fuerteventura from the ancestral range of T. canariensis in northern Lanzarote and a possible back colonisation of southern Lanzarote. The data further corroborate a previously proposed volcanic refugium, highlighting the impact of the dynamic volcanic history of the island on the phylogeographic patterns of the endemic taxa. T. canariensis includes at least two different species, one inhabiting the Jandia peninsula and central Fuerteventura and one spanning from central Fuerteventura to Lanzarote. Our data suggest that the extant northern African Titanidiops lineages may have expanded to the region after the islands were colonised and, hence, are not the source of colonisation. In addition, T. maroccanus may harbour several cryptic species.
在火山岛上进行的研究极大地促进了我们目前对生物如何多样化的理解。加那利群岛位于北非海岸的西北部,拥有大量的特有分类群。由于游走能力低,原蛛亚目蜘蛛通常不会出现在大洋岛屿上。栖息在该群岛最东端岛屿上的加那利岛泰坦蛛属蜘蛛是这一规律的例外。在这里,我们采用一种多基因座方法,结合三个线粒体基因和四个核基因,来研究这种非凡的螲蟷蛛的起源和系统地理学。我们使用两种替代方法为加那利群岛的殖民化提供了一个时间框架:在贝叶斯宽松时钟框架下进行串联和物种树推断。此外,我们通过贝叶斯多基因座物种界定方法研究了这些岛屿上隐性物种的存在。我们的结果表明,加那利岛泰坦蛛属蜘蛛曾一度殖民加那利群岛,最有可能是在中新世,尽管不同方法得出的时间框架之间存在差异,使得确切时间不确定。揭示了该群岛中该物种复杂的进化历史,其中包括从兰萨罗特岛北部的加那利岛泰坦蛛属蜘蛛祖先分布范围对富埃特文图拉岛的两次独立殖民,以及兰萨罗特岛南部可能的反向殖民。数据进一步证实了先前提出的火山避难所,突出了该岛动态火山历史对特有分类群系统地理格局的影响。加那利岛泰坦蛛属蜘蛛至少包括两个不同的物种,一个栖息在扬迪亚半岛和富埃特文图拉岛中部,另一个分布在富埃特文图拉岛中部到兰萨罗特岛。我们的数据表明,现存的北非泰坦蛛属谱系可能是在这些岛屿被殖民之后扩展到该地区的,因此不是殖民的来源。此外,摩洛哥泰坦蛛可能包含几个隐性物种。