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Complex phylogeographic patterns in the freshwater alga Synura provide new insights into ubiquity vs. endemism in microbial eukaryotes
Authors:SUNG MIN BOO  HAN SOON KIM  WOONGGHI SHIN  GA HUN BOO  SUNG MI CHO  BOK YEON JO  JEE‐HWAN KIM  JIN HEE KIM  EUN CHAN YANG  PETER A. SIVER  ALEXANDER P. WOLFE  DEBASHISH BHATTACHARYA  ROBERT A. ANDERSEN  HWAN SU YOON
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, Chungnam National University, Daejeon 305‐764, Korea;2. Department of Biology, Kyungbook National University, Daegu 702‐701, Korea;3. Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, West Boothbay Harbor, ME 04575, USA;4. Department of Botany, Connecticut College, New London, CT 06320, USA;5. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E3, Canada;6. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources and Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA
Abstract:The global distribution, abundance, and diversity of microscopic freshwater algae demonstrate an ability to overcome significant barriers such as dry land and oceans by exploiting a range of biotic and abiotic colonization vectors. If these vectors are considered unlimited and colonization occurs in proportion to population size, then globally ubiquitous distributions are predicted to arise. This model contrasts with observations that many freshwater microalgal taxa possess true biogeographies. Here, using a concatenated multigene data set, we study the phylogeography of the freshwater heterokont alga Synura petersenii sensu lato. Our results suggest that this Synura morphotaxon contains both cosmopolitan and regionally endemic cryptic species, co‐occurring in some cases, and masked by a common ultrastructural morphology. Phylogenies based on both proteins (seven protein‐coding plastid and mitochondrial genes) and DNA (nine genes including ITS and 18S rDNA) reveal pronounced biogeographic delineations within phylotypes of this cryptic species complex while retaining one clade that is globally distributed. Relaxed molecular clock calculations, constrained by fossil records, suggest that the genus Synura is considerably older than currently proposed. The availability of tectonically relevant geological time (107–108 years) has enabled the development of the observed, complex biogeographic patterns. Our comprehensive analysis of freshwater algal biogeography suggests that neither ubiquity nor endemism wholly explains global patterns of microbial eukaryote distribution and that processes of dispersal remain poorly understood.
Keywords:biogeography  endemism  Synura  Synurophyceae  ubiquity hypothesis
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