Toggle navigation
Datenzentrum
NP Gesäuse
Startseite
Daten
Publikationen
Projekte
Kontakt
Weitere Datenzentren
Nationalparks Austria NPA
Auswahl anwenden
Eintrag Nr. 37039
Glacial and postglacial species divergence and dispersal of European trickle midges (Diptera: Thaumaleidae)
Übergeordnete Einträge
ID
TITEL
DATENTYP
AUTOR
JAHR
10611
Quell- und Bachwochen
Project
Fachbereich Naturschutz & Forschung
2007
Weitere Informationen
www.senckenberg.de/arthropod-systematics
Interne Informationen
-
Externe Informationen
-
Datentyp
Publication
Dateiname
-
Pfad
-
Alternativ/Online Name
-
Autor/Ersteller
Haubrock, Phillip Joschka; Kvifte, Gunnar Mikalsen; Langguth, Henning; Wagner, RĂ¼diger
Medium
File (digital)
Jahr
2017
Monat
0
Aufbewahrungsort
-
Bemerkungen/Beschreibung
Pleistocene glaciations have greatly influenced the current distribution and diversity of aquatic and terrestrial species in Europe. We studied the phylogeography and the genetic structure of European trickle midges (Diptera: Thaumaleidae). This family is restricted to hygropetric zones with the genera Thaumalea, Protothaumalea and Androposopa occuring in Europe, including both microendemisms and species widely distributed across the continent. A 658-bp fragment of the mitochondrial CO1 and a 563-bp fragment of the nuclear Wingless-gene from 56 individuals belonging to 14 species were sequenced and analyzed. Androposopa is monophyletic and sister group to a broad Thaumalea clade which includes Protothaumalea. All species for which multiple populations were available are monophyletic, while the previously suggested hypothesis of species groups within Thaumalea is not supported. To understand the influence of glacial dynamics on Thaumaleidae evolution, we investigate four different scenarios for species divergences, testing different periods for within-species population splits. The results suggest different evolutionary histories for different species. For Thaumalea testacea, we found evidence for survival in multiple Alpine refugia throughout the glacial maxima. On the other hand, T. bezzii seems to have dispersed into Central Europe from the East Mediterranean area after the last glaciation. For the Faroe Islands populations of T. veralli, dispersal could have happened by air currents from Europe rather than by anthropogenic transport. Overall, our results show a wide range of dispersal patterns within an otherwise uniform group of organisms, opening new avenues for further studies in phylogeography and speciation.
Abgeleitete Einträge
-