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A climate-associated multispecies cryptic cline in the northwest Atlantic
Author(s) -
Ryan R. E. Stanley,
Claudio DiBacco,
Ben Lowen,
Robert G. Beiko,
Nicholas W. Jeffery,
Mallory Van Wyngaarden,
Paul Bentzen,
David Brickman,
Laura Benestan,
Louis Bernatchez,
Catherine L. Johnson,
Paul V. R. Snelgrove,
Zeliang Wang,
Brendan F. Wringe,
Ian Bradbury
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aaq0929
Subject(s) - cline (biology) , species complex , climate change , ecology , biology , geography , oceanography , geology , phylogenetic tree , gene , genetics , population , demography , sociology
The spatial genetic structure of most species in the open marine environment remains largely unresolved. This information gap creates uncertainty in the sustainable management, recovery, and associated resilience of marine communities and our capacity to extrapolate beyond the few species for which such information exists. We document a previously unidentified multispecies biogeographic break aligned with a steep climatic gradient and driven by seasonal temperature minima in the northwest Atlantic. The coherence of this genetic break across our five study species with contrasting life histories suggests a pervasive macroecological phenomenon. The integration of this genetic structure with habitat suitability models and climate forecasts predicts significant variation in northward distributional shifts among populations and availability of suitable habitat in future oceans. The results of our integrated approach provide new perspective on how cryptic intraspecific diversity associated with climatic variation influences species and community response to climate change beyond simple poleward shifts.

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