Genetic spatial structure of an anchialine cave annelid indicates connectivity within - but not between - islands of the Great Bahama Bank.

Mol Phylogenet Evol

University of Copenhagen, Marine Biological Section, Department of Biology, Universitetsparken 4, 1st floor, 2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark. Electronic address:

Published: April 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the biogeographical patterns of the stygobitic annelid Pelagomacellicephala iliffei in the unique environments of land-locked anchialine blue holes in the Bahamas.
  • Using advanced genetic analysis, the researchers identified five distinct evolutionary entities of the species across various islands, highlighting that geographic isolation significantly influences their evolutionary history.
  • Findings indicate that while gene flow occurs within the island of Eleuthera among blue holes, there is no evidence of species dispersal between different islands, with deep trenches acting as barriers to inter-island connectivity.

Article Abstract

Land-locked anchialine blue holes are karstic sinkholes and caves with tidally influenced, vertically stratified water bodies that harbor endemic fauna exhibiting variable troglomorphic features. These habitats represent island-like systems, which can serve to elucidate evolutionary and biogeographic processes at local scales. We investigated whether the 'continuous spelean corridor' hypothesis may elucidate the biogeographical distributions of the stygobitic annelid Pelagomacellicephala iliffei (Polynoidae) collected from the Great Bahama and Caicos Banks of the Bahamas Archipelago. Phylogenetic reconstructions were performed using Bayesian Inference on individual and combined datasets of three molecular markers (16S rDNA, COI, 18S rDNA) and species delimitation employed three widely accepted methods in DNA taxonomy, namely GMYC, bPTP, and ABGD. Mantel tests were used to test the effect of geography on genetic structure. Using these analyses, we recovered five independently evolving entities of the focal species across four islands of the Great Bahama Bank including Cat, Eleuthera, Exumas, and Long. Genetic data yielded strong correlations between islands and phylogenetic entities, signifying independent evolutionary histories within anchialine caves across the platform. The island of Eleuthera showed intra-island gene flow and dispersal capabilities between blue holes separated by 115km, providing evidence of a crevicular spelean corridor within the island. However, no evidence of inter-island dispersal is present in the analyzed system. Consistent with previous biogeographic studies of cave crustaceans, the major barriers shaping the cave biota of the Bahamas Archipelago appears to be the deep trenches and channels separating the Bahamian banks.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2017.01.003DOI Listing

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