Low level of genetic divergence between Harpagifer fish species (Perciformes: Notothenioidei) suggests a Quaternary colonization of Patagonia from the Antarctic Peninsula
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2014Metadata
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Hüne, M.
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Low level of genetic divergence between Harpagifer fish species (Perciformes: Notothenioidei) suggests a Quaternary colonization of Patagonia from the Antarctic Peninsula
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Abstract
The evolution of the marine benthic fauna of
Antarctica has been shaped by geological and climatic
atmospheric factors such as the geographic isolation of the
continent and the subsequent installation of the Antarctic
Circumpolar Current (ACC). Despite this isolation process,
strong biogeographic links still exist between marine fauna
from the Antarctic Peninsula and southern South America.
Recent studies in different taxa have shown, for example, that
shallow benthic organisms with long larval stages maintained
contact after the physical separation of the continents and
divergence may be associated with the intensification of the
ACC in the late Miocene—early Pliocene. In this context,
here we performed phylogenetic reconstructions and estimated
the level of molecular divergence between congeneric
species of Harpagifer, a marine notothenioid from the Antarctic
Peninsula (Harpagifer antarcticus) and Patagonia
(H. bispinis) using the mitochondrial control region. Phylogenies
were reconstructed using Maximum Parsimony and
Bayesian Inference, while the divergence time of H. antarcticus
and H. bispinis was estimated following a relaxed
Bayesian approach and assuming a strict molecular clock
hypothesis. According to our estimation, the divergence
between H. bispinis and H. antarcticus is more recent than
expected if it was associated with the intensification of the
ACC during the mid to late Miocene. We propose that climatic
and oceanographic changes during the coldest periods
of the Quaternary (i.e., Great Patagonian Glaciation,
1–0.9 Ma) and the northward migration of the Antarctic Polar
Front may have assisted the colonization of southern South
America by Harpagifer, from the Antarctic Peninsula via the
Scotia Arc Islands.
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Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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INACH M_10–11
and Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity (IEB)
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