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Extensive cryptic species diversity and fine-scale endemism in the marine red alga Portieria in the Philippines
Author(s) -
Dioli Ann Payo,
Frédérik Leliaert,
Heroen Verbruggen,
Sofie D’hondt,
Hilconida P. Calumpong,
Olivier De Clerck
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society b biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.342
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1471-2954
pISSN - 0962-8452
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.2012.2660
Subject(s) - endemism , archipelagic state , archipelago , biology , coalescent theory , ecology , species complex , biodiversity , dna barcoding , species diversity , allopatric speciation , geography , phylogenetics , phylogenetic tree , fishery , population , biochemistry , demography , sociology , gene
We investigated species diversity and distribution patterns of the marine red alga Portieria in the Philippine archipelago. Species boundaries were tested based on mitochondrial, plastid and nuclear encoded loci, using a general mixed Yule-coalescent (GMYC) model-based approach and a Bayesian multilocus species delimitation method. The outcome of the GMYC analysis of the mitochondrial encoded cox2-3 dataset was highly congruent with the multilocus analysis. In stark contrast with the current morphology-based assumption that the genus includes a single, widely distributed species in the Indo-West Pacific (Portieria hornemannii), DNA-based species delimitation resulted in the recognition of 21 species within the Philippines. Species distributions were found to be highly structured with most species restricted to island groups within the archipelago. These extremely narrow species ranges and high levels of intra-archipelagic endemism contrast with the wide-held belief that marine organisms generally have large geographical ranges and that endemism is at most restricted to the archipelagic level. Our results indicate that speciation in the marine environment may occur at spatial scales smaller than 100 km, comparable with some terrestrial systems. Our finding of fine-scale endemism has important consequences for marine conservation and management

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