Abstract
We sequenced 20 new, field-collected individuals for up to seven genes to explore the phylogeography and conservation genetics of the threatened Nile softshell turtle Trionyx triunguis, including the first known-locality specimen from sub-Saharan Africa. Samples from Cameroon (West Africa), the Mediterranean and Nile River differed by at most a single nucleotide per gene, indicating the potential for a recent connection between these currently disjunct populations via the Nile-Congo River systems. Recently reported mitochondrial diversity between Mediterranean and "sub-Saharan" samples of the Nile softshell indicate that significant divergence exists across the species' range, but that variation cannot be fully incorporated into our analysis since those samples lack specific locality data. © 2010 The Author(s).
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Gidis, M., Spinks, P. Q., Çevik, E., Kaska, Y., & Shaffer, H. B. (2011). Shallow genetic divergence indicates a Congo-Nile riverine connection for the softshell turtle Trionyx triunguis. Conservation Genetics, 12(2), 589–594. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10592-010-0160-2
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