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Phylogeographic Analysis Elucidates the Influence of the Ice Ages on the Disjunct Distribution of Relict Dragonflies in Asia

Unusual biogeographic patterns of closely related groups reflect events in the past, and molecular analyses can help to elucidate these events. While ample research on the origin of disjunct distributions of different organism groups in the Western Paleartic has been conducted, such studies are rare...

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Autores principales: Büsse, Sebastian, von Grumbkow, Philipp, Hummel, Susanne, Shah, Deep Narayan, Tachamo Shah, Ram Devi, Li, Jingke, Zhang, Xueping, Yoshizawa, Kazunori, Wedmann, Sonja, Hörnschemeyer, Thomas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3364219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22666462
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038132
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author Büsse, Sebastian
von Grumbkow, Philipp
Hummel, Susanne
Shah, Deep Narayan
Tachamo Shah, Ram Devi
Li, Jingke
Zhang, Xueping
Yoshizawa, Kazunori
Wedmann, Sonja
Hörnschemeyer, Thomas
author_facet Büsse, Sebastian
von Grumbkow, Philipp
Hummel, Susanne
Shah, Deep Narayan
Tachamo Shah, Ram Devi
Li, Jingke
Zhang, Xueping
Yoshizawa, Kazunori
Wedmann, Sonja
Hörnschemeyer, Thomas
author_sort Büsse, Sebastian
collection PubMed
description Unusual biogeographic patterns of closely related groups reflect events in the past, and molecular analyses can help to elucidate these events. While ample research on the origin of disjunct distributions of different organism groups in the Western Paleartic has been conducted, such studies are rare for Eastern Palearctic organisms. In this paper we present a phylogeographic analysis of the disjunct distribution pattern of the extant species of the strongly cool-adapted Epiophlebia dragonflies from Asia. We investigated sequences of the usually more conserved 18 S rDNA and 28 S rDNA genes and the more variable sequences of ITS1, ITS2 and CO2 of all three currently recognised Epiophlebia species and of a sample of other odonatan species. In all genes investigated the degrees of similarity between species of Epiophlebia are very high and resemble those otherwise found between different populations of the same species in Odonata. This indicates that substantial gene transfer between these populations occurred in the comparatively recent past. Our analyses imply a wide distribution of the ancestor of extant Epiophlebia in Southeast Asia during the last ice age, when suitable habitats were more common. During the following warming phase, its range contracted, resulting in the current disjunct distribution. Given the strong sensitivity of these species to climatic parameters, the current trend to increasing global temperatures will further reduce acceptable habitats and seriously threaten the existences of these last representatives of an ancient group of Odonata.
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spelling pubmed-33642192012-06-04 Phylogeographic Analysis Elucidates the Influence of the Ice Ages on the Disjunct Distribution of Relict Dragonflies in Asia Büsse, Sebastian von Grumbkow, Philipp Hummel, Susanne Shah, Deep Narayan Tachamo Shah, Ram Devi Li, Jingke Zhang, Xueping Yoshizawa, Kazunori Wedmann, Sonja Hörnschemeyer, Thomas PLoS One Research Article Unusual biogeographic patterns of closely related groups reflect events in the past, and molecular analyses can help to elucidate these events. While ample research on the origin of disjunct distributions of different organism groups in the Western Paleartic has been conducted, such studies are rare for Eastern Palearctic organisms. In this paper we present a phylogeographic analysis of the disjunct distribution pattern of the extant species of the strongly cool-adapted Epiophlebia dragonflies from Asia. We investigated sequences of the usually more conserved 18 S rDNA and 28 S rDNA genes and the more variable sequences of ITS1, ITS2 and CO2 of all three currently recognised Epiophlebia species and of a sample of other odonatan species. In all genes investigated the degrees of similarity between species of Epiophlebia are very high and resemble those otherwise found between different populations of the same species in Odonata. This indicates that substantial gene transfer between these populations occurred in the comparatively recent past. Our analyses imply a wide distribution of the ancestor of extant Epiophlebia in Southeast Asia during the last ice age, when suitable habitats were more common. During the following warming phase, its range contracted, resulting in the current disjunct distribution. Given the strong sensitivity of these species to climatic parameters, the current trend to increasing global temperatures will further reduce acceptable habitats and seriously threaten the existences of these last representatives of an ancient group of Odonata. Public Library of Science 2012-05-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3364219/ /pubmed/22666462 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038132 Text en Büsse et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Büsse, Sebastian
von Grumbkow, Philipp
Hummel, Susanne
Shah, Deep Narayan
Tachamo Shah, Ram Devi
Li, Jingke
Zhang, Xueping
Yoshizawa, Kazunori
Wedmann, Sonja
Hörnschemeyer, Thomas
Phylogeographic Analysis Elucidates the Influence of the Ice Ages on the Disjunct Distribution of Relict Dragonflies in Asia
title Phylogeographic Analysis Elucidates the Influence of the Ice Ages on the Disjunct Distribution of Relict Dragonflies in Asia
title_full Phylogeographic Analysis Elucidates the Influence of the Ice Ages on the Disjunct Distribution of Relict Dragonflies in Asia
title_fullStr Phylogeographic Analysis Elucidates the Influence of the Ice Ages on the Disjunct Distribution of Relict Dragonflies in Asia
title_full_unstemmed Phylogeographic Analysis Elucidates the Influence of the Ice Ages on the Disjunct Distribution of Relict Dragonflies in Asia
title_short Phylogeographic Analysis Elucidates the Influence of the Ice Ages on the Disjunct Distribution of Relict Dragonflies in Asia
title_sort phylogeographic analysis elucidates the influence of the ice ages on the disjunct distribution of relict dragonflies in asia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3364219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22666462
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038132
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