Santamaria Carlos A, Mateos Mariana, DeWitt Thomas J, Hurtado Luis A
Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences Texas A&M University College Station Texas; Biology Faculty College of Arts and Sciences University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee Sarasota Florida.
Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences Texas A&M University College Station Texas.
Ecol Evol. 2016 Feb 9;6(5):1537-54. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1984. eCollection 2016 Mar.
Multiple highly divergent lineages have been identified within Ligia occidentalis sensu lato, a rocky supralittoral isopod distributed along a ~3000 km latitudinal gradient that encompasses several proposed marine biogeographic provinces and ecoregions in the eastern Pacific. Highly divergent lineages have nonoverlapping geographic distributions, with distributional limits that generally correspond with sharp environmental changes. Crossbreeding experiments suggest postmating reproductive barriers exist among some of them, and surveys of mitochondrial and nuclear gene markers do not show evidence of hybridization. Populations are highly isolated, some of which appear to be very small; thus, the effects of drift are expected to reduce the efficiency of selection. Large genetic divergences among lineages, marked environmental differences in their ranges, reproductive isolation, and/or high isolation of populations may have resulted in morphological differences in L. occidentalis, not detected yet by traditional taxonomy. We used landmark-based geometric morphometric analyses to test for differences in body shape among highly divergent lineages of L. occidentalis, and among populations within these lineages. We analyzed a total of 492 individuals from 53 coastal localities from the southern California Bight to Central Mexico, including the Gulf of California. We conducted discriminant function analyses (DFAs) on body shape morphometrics to assess morphological variation among genetically differentiated lineages and their populations. We also tested for associations between phylogeny and morphological variation, and whether genetic divergence is correlated to multivariate morphological divergence. We detected significant differences in body shape among highly divergent lineages, and among populations within these lineages. Nonetheless, neither lineages nor populations can be discriminated on the basis of body shape, because correct classification rates of cross-validated DFAs were low. Genetic distance and phylogeny had weak to no effect on body shape variation. The supralittoral environment appears to exert strong stabilizing selection and/or strong functional constraints on body shape in L. occidentalis, thereby leading to morphological stasis in this isopod.
在广义的西方海岸水虱(Ligia occidentalis sensu lato)中已鉴定出多个高度分化的谱系,这种生活在岩石潮上带的等足类动物沿着约3000公里的纬度梯度分布,涵盖了东太平洋几个拟议的海洋生物地理省份和生态区域。高度分化的谱系具有不重叠的地理分布,其分布界限通常与剧烈的环境变化相对应。杂交实验表明其中一些谱系之间存在交配后生殖障碍,并且对线粒体和核基因标记的调查未显示杂交证据。种群高度隔离,其中一些似乎非常小;因此,预计遗传漂变的影响会降低选择效率。谱系之间的巨大遗传差异、其分布范围内明显的环境差异、生殖隔离和/或种群的高度隔离可能导致西方海岸水虱出现形态差异,而传统分类学尚未检测到这些差异。我们使用基于地标点的几何形态测量分析来测试西方海岸水虱高度分化谱系之间以及这些谱系内种群之间的体型差异。我们总共分析了来自南加利福尼亚湾到墨西哥中部(包括加利福尼亚湾)53个沿海地点的492个个体。我们对体型形态测量数据进行判别函数分析(DFA),以评估遗传分化谱系及其种群之间的形态变异。我们还测试了系统发育与形态变异之间的关联,以及遗传差异是否与多变量形态差异相关。我们在高度分化的谱系之间以及这些谱系内的种群之间检测到了显著的体型差异。然而,无论是谱系还是种群都不能根据体型进行区分,因为交叉验证DFA的正确分类率很低。遗传距离和系统发育对体型变异的影响微弱或没有影响。潮上带环境似乎对西方海岸水虱的体型施加了强烈的稳定选择和/或强大的功能限制,从而导致这种等足类动物的形态停滞。