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Phylogeography and population genomics of a lotic water beetle across a complex tropical landscape
Authors:Athena Wai Lam  Morgan Gueuning  Carolin Kindler  Matthew Van Dam  Nadir Alvarez  Rawati Panjaitan  Helena Shaverdo  Lloyd T. White  George K. Roderick  Michael Balke
Affiliation:1. SNSB‐Zoologische Staatssammlung München, Munich, Germany;2. Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley, California;3. Institute for Biodiversity Science and Sustainability, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, California;4. Department of Ecology and Evolution, Biophore, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland;5. Competence Division for Research Technology and Knowledge Exchange, Method Development and Analytics, Agroscope, W?denswil, Switzerland;6. Institute of Biology, University of Neuchatel, Neuchatel, Switzerland;7. Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences and Mathematics, State University of Papua (UNIPA), Manokwari, West Papua, Indonesia;8. Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna, Austria;9. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia;10. GeoBioCenter, Ludwig‐Maximilians‐Universit?t München, Munich, Germany
Abstract:The habitat template concept applied to a freshwater system indicates that lotic species, or those which occupy permanent habitats along stream courses, are less dispersive than lentic species, or those that occur in more ephemeral aquatic habitats. Thus, populations of lotic species will be more structured than those of lentic species. Stream courses include both flowing water and small, stagnant microhabitats that can provide refuge when streams are low. Many species occur in these microhabitats but remain poorly studied. Here, we present population genetic data for one such species, the tropical diving beetle Exocelina manokwariensis (Dytiscidae), sampled from six localities along a ~300 km transect across the Birds Head Peninsula of New Guinea. Molecular data from both mitochondrial (CO1 sequences) and nuclear (ddRAD loci) regions document fine‐scale population structure across populations that are ~45 km apart. Our results are concordant with previous phylogenetic and macroecological studies that applied the habitat template concept to aquatic systems. This study also illustrates that these diverse but mostly overlooked microhabitats are promising study systems in freshwater ecology and evolutionary biology. With the advent of next‐generation sequencing, fine‐scale population genomic studies are feasible for small nonmodel organisms to help illuminate the effect of habitat stability on species’ natural history, population structure and geographic distribution.
Keywords:ddRAD  dytiscidae  lentic  New Guinea  population connectivity  tropical streams
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