Historical biogeography and speciation in the creole wrasses (labridae, clepticus)

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Abstract

We tested whether vicariance or dispersal was the likely source of speciation in the genus Clepticus by evaluating the evolutionary timing of the effect of the mid-Atlantic barrier, which separates C. brasiliensis and C. africanus, and the Amazon barrier, which separates C. parrae and C brasiliensis. Genetic data from three mitochondrial genes and one nuclear gene were used. Mitochondrial genes separated Clepticus into three well supported clades corresponding to the three recognized allopatric morpho-species. All analyses provided consistent support for an initial separation (~9.68 to 1.86 mya; 4.84% sequence divergence) of the Caribbean and South Atlantic lineages, followed by a much more recent divergence (~ 0.60 to 0.12 mya; 0.3% sequence divergence) of the Brazilian and African sister morpho-species. Both these phylogenetic events occurred well after the formation of the two barriers that currently separate those three allopatric populations. The planktonic larval duration of these species (35-49 days) and coastal pelagic habits may have facilitated dispersal by this genus across those dispersal barriers after they formed.

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Beldade, R., Heiser, J. B., Robertson, D. R., Gasparini, J. L., Floeter, S. R., & Bernardi, G. (2009). Historical biogeography and speciation in the creole wrasses (labridae, clepticus). Marine Biology, 156(4), 679–687. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-008-1118-5

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