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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Pleistocene diversification in Morocco and recent demographic expansion in the Mediterranean pond turtle Mauremys leprosa
Joana VeríssimoJoana VeríssimoMohamed NaimiMarco ArculeoMohamed ZnariUwe FritzJosé A. TeixeiraJosé A. TeixeiraPaulo PereiraPaulo PereiraGuillermo Velo-antónChristian KehlmaierFederico MarroneFrancesco SaccoHeiko Stuckassubject
0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineMediterranean climateColonizationMauremys leprosaPleistocenebiologyEcologyStrait of GibraltarDiversification (finance)Settore BIO/05 - Zoologiabiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesClimatic oscillation03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyColonizationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographic expansionMoroccan mountaindescription
Quaternary climatic oscillations and geographic barriers have strongly influenced the distribution and diversification of thermophilic species occurring in the Mediterranean Basin. The Western Mediterranean pond turtle, Mauremys leprosa, is widely distributed throughout the Iberian Peninsula, southern France and most of the Maghreb region, with two subspecies currently recognized. In this work, we used 566 samples, including 259 new individuals, across the species range, and sequenced two mitochondrial markers (cytochrome b gene and control region; 163 samples in a concatenated mtDNA dataset) and one nuclear intron (R35; 23 samples representing all identified sublineages) to study the evolutionary history of M. leprosa. We combined phylogenetic methods and phylogeographic continuous diffusion models with spatial analysis. Our results (1) show a high level of genetic structure in Morocco originated during the Pleistocene; (2) reveal two independent population expansion waves from Morocco to Tunisia and to southern Europe, which later expanded throughout the Iberian Peninsula, and (3) identify several secondary contact zones in Morocco. Our study also sheds new light on the role of geographical features (Moroccan mountains ranges and the Strait of Gibraltar) and Pleistocene climatic oscillations in shaping genetic diversity and structure of M. leprosa, and underlines the importance of the Maghreb as a differentiation centre harbouring distinct glacial refugia.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-07-22 |