Disentangling causes of disjunction on the South Island of New Zealand: the Alpine fault hypothesis of vicariance revisited |
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Authors: | MARTIN HAASE BRUCE MARSHALL IAN HOGG |
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Affiliation: | National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Gate 10, Silverdale Road, Hamilton, New Zealand; Department of Biological Science, University of Waikato, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton, New Zealand; Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, PO Box 467, Wellington, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Many elements of the flora and fauna of New Zealand's South Island show disjunct distributions with conspecific populations or closely-related species that occur in the north-west and south separated by a central gap. Three events have been implicated to account for this pattern: Pleistocene glaciations, Pliocene mountain building, or displacement along the Alpine fault, the border of the Pacific and Australian plates stretching diagonally across the South Island from south-west to north-east that formed during the Miocene. Disjunct distributions of species level taxa are probably too young to be due to Alpine fault vicariance. It has therefore been suggested that the biogeographical impact of the Alpine fault, if any, should be apparent on deeper phylogenetic levels. We tested this hypothesis by reconstructing the phylogenetic relationships of the hydrobiid gastropods of New Zealand based on mitochondrial DNA fragments of cytochrome oxidase subunit I (CO I ) and 16S rDNA. The creno- and stygobiont species of this family are typically poor dispersers. Therefore, ancient patterns of distribution may be conserved. The phylogenetic reconstructions were in accordance with the Alpine fault hypothesis uniting genera occurring on either side of the fault. Divergence estimates based on a molecular clock of CO I indicated splits predating the Pliocene uplift of the Alps. © 2007 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society , 2007, 91 , 361–374. |
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Keywords: | freshwater gastropods Hydrobiidae molecular clock mtDNA phylogeography |
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