Geographic patterning of variation in segment number in geophilomorph centipedes: clines and speciation |
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Authors: | Arthur W Kettle C |
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Affiliation: | Ecology Centre, University of Sunderland, Sunderland SR1 3SD, UK |
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Abstract: | SUMMARY Since their origin as a metameric group, arthropods have diversified considerably in their number of segments. Present-day geophilomorph centipedes provide a model system for investigating the evolutionary origins of this diversification, because they exhibit intraspecific variation in segment number. (This variation is, however, derived; it is not a plesiomorphic condition within the Chilopoda.) Previous studies have shown that there are significant differences in segment number between populations within several geophilomorph species. In one (arguably two) species, it has been demonstrated that there is a particular form of geographic patterning of the variation, namely a latitudinal cline, with the segment number decreasing with increasing distance north. Here, we provide additional data on four more species, all of which show evidence of a latitudinal cline in either one or both sexes. It is therefore becoming clear that this is a general phenomenon, applying widely (perhaps universally) across the Geophilomorpha, a group consisting of some 1000 known species. It may be that latitudinal clines are a frequent part of the speciation cycle in this group. |
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