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Abstract(s)
Phylogeographic patterns among coastal fishes
are expected to be influenced by distinct ecological, biological
and life history traits, along with historical events
and oceanography (past and present). This study focuses on
the broad range phylogeography of the Montagu’s blenny
Coryphoblennius galerita, a species with well-known ecological
features, strictly tied to rocky environments and
with limited dispersal capability. Eleven locations from
the western Mediterranean to the Bay of Biscay (including
the Macaronesian archipelagos) were sampled. Mitochondrial
DNA control region (CR) and the first intron of
the S7 ribosomal protein gene were used to address the
population structure, the signatures of expansion/contraction
events retained in the genealogies and potential glacial
refugia. The genetic diversity of the Montagu’s blenny was
high throughout the sampled area, reaching maximum values
in the Mediterranean and western Iberian Peninsula.
The results confirmed a marked structure of C. galerita along the sampled area, with a major separation found
between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic populations,
and suggesting also a separation between the Azores and
the remaining Atlantic locations. This study revealed complex
and deep genealogies for this species, with Montagu’s
blenny populations presenting signatures of events clearly
older than the Last Glacial Maximum, with lineages coalescing
in early Pleistocene and Pliocene. Three potential
glacial refugia where this species might have survived
Pleistocene glaciations and from where the recolonization
process might have taken place are suggested: South of Iberian
Peninsula/North Africa, Mediterranean and Azores.
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Keywords
Citation
Marine Biology, 161, 2509-2520
Publisher
Springer Verlag