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Phylogeographie des Zygaena transalpina–Artenkomplexes: molekulare und morphometrische Differenzierung weist auf glaziale Refugien in Südfrankreich, Westfrankeich und Mikrorefugien innerhalb der Alpen hin
Author(s) -
Von Reumont Björn M.,
Struwe JanFrederic,
Schwarzer Julia,
Misof Bernhard
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of zoological systematics and evolutionary research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.769
H-Index - 50
eISSN - 1439-0469
pISSN - 0947-5745
DOI - 10.1111/j.1439-0469.2011.00637.x
Subject(s) - phylogeography , biology , glacial period , taxon , ecology , pleistocene , biogeography , last glacial maximum , phylogenetic tree , paleontology , biochemistry , gene
Patterns of common recolonization routes from glacial refugia to Central Europe during the Pleistocene are generalized to paradigms of postglacial recolonization in Europe. Recent studies indicate, however, that the actual phylogeographic history of many species might be more complex and cannot be simplified to generalized patterns. Burnet moths of the Zygaena transalpina complex represent a group of closely related taxa, which are considered as a typical example for these generalized patterns. At present, three groups are recognized that are assumed to have spread from three classical refugia in Western Europe, Italy and the Balkans to Central Europe. Here, we re‐investigate their phylogeography using a combined molecular and morphometric approach. Phylogenetic and nested clade phylogeographic analyses of 476 samples from 55 localities taken from Southern and Central Europe reveal that the Zygaena transalpina complex consists of three distinct haplotype clusters, which geographically roughly correspond to possible refugia in Western Europe, Italy and the Balkans. A synthesis of the data with a geometric morphometry dataset of 425 specimens from 46 localities corroborates this molecular result but differs in several aspects. Important new aspects are multiple refugia of the western ‘ hippocrepidis ’ branch and micro‐habitats within the Alps of the central ‘ transalpina ’ branch. Further, our results display a more complex phylogeographic pattern for this species complex, which is not tractable with a rigid, generalized pattern.

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