Beyond Allopatric Speciation: Testing for Genetic Homogeneity in Duttaphrynus melanostictus in Relation to Human- induced Dispersal
release_kq7ok35t5vcyhidxzdmadramoq
by
Siti N. Othman,
Yi-Huey Chen,
Desiree Andersen,
Ming-Feng Chuang,
Yikweon Jang,
Amaël Borzée,
Thüringer Universitäts- Und Landesbibliothek Jena
2018
Abstract
Human-
induced dispersal of species is accelerating along with the increase in human movements. This
unnatural dispersal contributes to range expansions, such as for the Asian black
-spined toad,
Duttaphrynus
melanostictus
. The species became invasive in numerous ecosystems, such as Madagascar and the
Komodo islands area, where it has a strong ecological impact. Here, we investigated the origin of D
.
melanostictus
in Taiwan using statistical parsimony networks together with joint Bayesian inference
of
phylogeny and population clustering approaches. We tested four major dispersal hypotheses to explain the
relation between the Taiwanese and other D. melanostictus
populations: 1) the species originates from
South East Asia (SEA) and it is invasive in T
aiwan as a result of human-
induced dispersal, 2) the species
originates from South East Asia, and dispersed ov
er land bridges, 3) the species
comes from the Chinese
mainland through human-
induced dispersal, 4) the species originates from the Chinese mainland, and
dispersed over land bridges during glacial maxima. Our unrooted haplotype network based on a fragment of
contiguous tRNA Gly
-ND3 mitochondrial DNA from 22 individuals, together with homologous sequences
extracted from GenBank for China and SEA, confirmed the non-
clustering of haplotypes from SEA and
Taiwan. Likewise, Bayesian phylogenetic inferences further clarified the absence of genetic segregation
between Taiwanese and mainland Chinese populations. The haplotypes from Taiwan were segregated
with
in a monophyletic clade, shared with mainland Chinese populations. The origin of the Taiwanese D.
melanostictus
is consequently linked to the Chinese clade, and rejects our first and second hypothesis. The
clustering with haplotypes from geographically close localities in m [...]
In text/plain
format
Archived Files and Locations
application/pdf
7.6 MB
file_clzw2audm5c5dc43r7uid7mqhe
|
www.db-thueringen.de (publisher) web.archive.org (webarchive) |
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Datacite Metadata (via API)
Worldcat
wikidata.org
CORE.ac.uk
Semantic Scholar
Google Scholar