Esposito Lauren A, Bloom Trevor, Caicedo-Quiroga Laura, Alicea-Serrano Angela M, Sánchez-Ruíz Jose A, May-Collado Laura J, Binford Greta J, Agnarsson Ingi
University of California at Berkeley, Essig Museum, 130 Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-3114, United States.
Lewis and Clark College, 0615 S.W. Palatine Hill Road, Portland, OR 97219, United States.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2015 Dec;93:107-17. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2015.07.005. Epub 2015 Jul 26.
Islands have played a key role in understanding species formation ever since Darwin's work on the Galapagos and Wallace's work in the Malay Archipelago. Like oceanic islands, habitat 'islands', such as mountaintops and caves similarly may drive diversification. Here we examine patterns of diversification in the tailless whip spider genus Phrynus Larmarck, 1809 (Amblypygida: Phrynidae) a system that shows evidence of diversification under the influence of 'islands within islands'. We estimate phylogeographic history and measure genetic diversity among representatives of three nominal Phrynus species from epigean and cave systems of Puerto Rico and nearby islands. Data from five loci (mitochondrial 12S, 16S, Cox1; nuclear H3, 28S) were used to generate phylogenetic hypotheses and to assess species monophyly and phylogeographic relationships. Genetic divergences and population limits were estimated and assessed using the Geneious barcoding plugin and the genealogical sorting index. We find that mtDNA sequence divergences within each of the three Phrynus species range between 15% and 20%. Genetic divergence is structured at three spatial scales: among islands in a manner consistent with the GAARlandia hypothesis, among bedrock formations within Puerto Rico, and among caves within these formations. Every isolated cave system contains a unique mtDNA genetic lineage of Phrynus, with divergence among cave systems far exceeding that within. In some localities epigean specimens nest among cave taxa, in others caves are monophyletic. Remarkably, clades that show up to 20% mtDNA sequence divergence show little or no variation in the nuclear markers. We interpret this pattern as resulting from extreme conservation of our nuclear markers rather than male sex-biased dispersal, based on high conservation of 28S and H3 between our individuals and other amblypygid genera that are restricted to Africa. While this study includes but a tiny fraction of Caribbean caves, our findings suggest Phrynus may be much more diverse than hitherto thought, at least in terms of mtDNA diversity, and that the arthropod fauna of caves may represent a dimension of biodiversity that is yet to be discovered in the Caribbean biodiversity hotspot.
自从达尔文对加拉帕戈斯群岛的研究以及华莱士对马来群岛的研究以来,岛屿在理解物种形成过程中发挥了关键作用。与海洋岛屿一样,栖息地“岛屿”,如山顶和洞穴同样可能推动物种多样化。在这里,我们研究了无尾鞭蛛属Phrynus Larmarck,1809(无鞭目:鞭蛛科)的多样化模式,该系统显示出在“岛中岛”影响下的多样化证据。我们估计了系统发育历史,并测量了来自波多黎各及附近岛屿地表和洞穴系统的三种名义上的Phrynus物种代表之间的遗传多样性。来自五个基因座(线粒体12S、16S、Cox1;核H3、28S)的数据用于生成系统发育假设,并评估物种的单系性和系统地理关系。使用Geneious条形码插件和系谱分选指数估计和评估遗传差异和种群界限。我们发现,三种Phrynus物种中每种物种内的线粒体DNA序列差异在15%至20%之间。遗传差异在三个空间尺度上呈现出结构化:在岛屿之间,其方式与GAARlandia假说一致;在波多黎各的基岩地层之间;以及在这些地层内的洞穴之间。每个孤立的洞穴系统都包含Phrynus独特的线粒体DNA遗传谱系,洞穴系统之间的差异远远超过内部差异。在一些地方,地表标本嵌套在洞穴类群中,在其他地方,洞穴是单系的。值得注意的是,线粒体DNA序列差异高达20%的分支在核标记中几乎没有或没有变异。基于我们的个体与仅限于非洲的其他无鞭目属之间28S和H3的高度保守性,我们将这种模式解释为是由于我们的核标记极度保守,而不是雄性偏向的扩散所致。虽然这项研究只涵盖了加勒比洞穴的一小部分,但我们的发现表明,至少在线粒体DNA多样性方面,Phrynus可能比迄今认为的要多样化得多,并且洞穴中的节肢动物区系可能代表了加勒比生物多样性热点地区尚未被发现的生物多样性维度。