AI Article Synopsis

  • The study integrates ecological niche modeling (ENMs) and population genetics to identify potential refugia for the harvestman Sclerobunus robustus in the Southern Rocky Mountains, supporting higher genetic diversity in refugial populations.
  • ENMs point to two significant refugial areas that have persisted over time, with genetic data confirming patterns of range expansion outside these refugia.
  • Phylogenetic and divergence dating analyses reveal distinct clades of S. robustus with origins tracing back to the Pliocene, highlighting the influence of historic glacial cycles on species diversification and migration patterns.

Article Abstract

The integration of ecological niche modelling into phylogeographic analyses has allowed for the identification and testing of potential refugia under a hypothesis-based framework, where the expected patterns of higher genetic diversity in refugial populations and evidence of range expansion of nonrefugial populations are corroborated with empirical data. In this study, we focus on a montane-restricted cryophilic harvestman, Sclerobunus robustus, distributed throughout the heterogeneous Southern Rocky Mountains and Intermontane Plateau of southwestern North America. We identified hypothetical refugia using ecological niche models (ENMs) across three time periods, corroborated these refugia with population genetic methods using double-digest RAD-seq data and conducted population-level phylogenetic and divergence dating analyses. ENMs identify two large temporally persistent regions in the mid-latitude highlands. Genetic patterns support these two hypothesized refugia with higher genetic diversity within refugial populations and evidence for range expansion in populations found outside hypothesized refugia. Phylogenetic analyses identify five to six genetically divergent, geographically cohesive clades of S. robustus. Divergence dating analyses suggest that these separate refugia date to the Pliocene and that divergence between clades pre-dates the late Pleistocene glacial cycles, while diversification within clades was likely driven by these cycles. Population genetic analyses reveal effects of both isolation by distance (IBD) and isolation by environment (IBE), with IBD more important in the continuous mountainous portion of the distribution, while IBE was stronger in the populations inhabiting the isolated sky islands of the south. Using model-based coalescent approaches, we find support for postdivergence migration between clades from separate refugia.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.13789DOI Listing

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