Microgeographic differentiation among closely related species of Biomphalaria (Gastropoda: Planorbidae) from the Andean Altiplano
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Collado Insulza, Gonzalo
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Microgeographic differentiation among closely related species of Biomphalaria (Gastropoda: Planorbidae) from the Andean Altiplano
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Abstract
Direct development and water dependence entail limited vagility in freshwater fauna. In these organisms, the
population structure is probably linked to restrictions imposed by the habitat. In this study we investigate the
relative contribution of processes stimulating the divergence of populations of Biomphalaria costata (Biese, 1951)
and Biomphalaria crequii (Courty, 1907), two freshwater snails occurring in two contiguous and fragmented closed
basins from the Andean Altiplano using mitochondrial DNA (cytochrome c oxidase subunit I) sequences, shell
morphometric and radular morphology. In order to clarify the species boundaries, a third allopatric species was
included: Biomphalaria aymara Valdovinos & Stuardo, 1991. Molecular analyses recovered two distinct clades: one
composed of B. aymara from the Isluga swamps and B. costata from Spring 1 in Salar de Carcote, the single spring
occupied by this species, and another integrated by snails from 12 springs spread across the Salar de Carcote
and the Salar de Ascotán assigned to B. crequii, originally described from the Salar de Ascotán. Unlike shell
morphometrics, radular morphology was informative for distinguishing these species. The division of the lineages
occurred in the Late Pleistocene. A subclade that includes snails from the southernmost springs in Salar de Ascotán
suggests fragmentation of the distribution of B. crequii associated with landscape discontinuities. In addition to
microvicariance signals, the private haplotypes scattered around both salt spans show that close-range dispersal
is a common biogeographic process in this species. As evolutionary units, the single isolated and restricted
population of B. costata has a high priority for conservation.
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Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2013, 169, 640–652
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