Processes driving and maintaining disjunct genetic populations in marine systems are poorly understood, owing to a lack of evidence of hard barriers that could have shaped patterns of extant population structure. Here, we map two genetically divergent lineages of an obligate rocky shore fish, Clinus cottoides, and model sea-level change during the last 110 000 years to provide the first evidence of a vicariant event along the southern coastline of Africa. Results reveal that lowered sea levels during glacial periods drastically reduced rocky intertidal habitat, which may have isolated populations in two refugia for at least 40 000 years. Contemporary coastal dynamics and oceanography explain secondary contact between lineages. This scenario provides an explanation for the origin of population genetic breaks despite a lack of obvious present-day geographical barriers and highlights the need for including palaeo-oceanography in unravelling extant population patterns. © 2014 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Toms, J. A., Compton, J. S., Smale, M., & Von Der Heyden, S. (2014). Variation in palaeo-shorelines explains contemporary population genetic patterns of rocky shore species. Biology Letters, 10(6). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2014.0330
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