2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294x.2006.03107.x
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Abstract: Comparative phylogeographic studies of animals with low mobility and/or high habitat specificity remain rare, yet such organisms may hold fine-grained palaeoecological signal. Comparisons of multiple, codistributed species can elucidate major historical events. As part of a multitaxon programme, mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) variation was analysed in two species of terrestrial flatworm, Artioposthia lucasi and Caenoplana coerulea. We applied coalescent demographic estimators and nested clade analysi… Show more

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Cited by 104 publications
(85 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
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“…Many of these studies have focussed on organisms with a high-dispersal ability (basically vertebrates, Cabanne et al, 2008;D'Horta et al, 2011) that may hinder making fine-scale predictions. Specialized and low-dispersal organisms can preserve the genetic signature of the past climate and geological events in small geographical areas (Hugall et al, 2002;Sunnucks et al, 2006;Marske et al, 2011). Thus, using a low-dispersal organism maximizes the probability, given comparable sampling designs, of detecting a finerscale genetic structure within the AF relative to other studies using higher-dispersal co-distributed organisms.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…Many of these studies have focussed on organisms with a high-dispersal ability (basically vertebrates, Cabanne et al, 2008;D'Horta et al, 2011) that may hinder making fine-scale predictions. Specialized and low-dispersal organisms can preserve the genetic signature of the past climate and geological events in small geographical areas (Hugall et al, 2002;Sunnucks et al, 2006;Marske et al, 2011). Thus, using a low-dispersal organism maximizes the probability, given comparable sampling designs, of detecting a finerscale genetic structure within the AF relative to other studies using higher-dispersal co-distributed organisms.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Intrapopulation DNA sequence variation and neutrality tests We found that the levels of nucleotide diversity (p) for both the COI and ITS-1 markers (Table 1) were high compared with those estimated for other planarian species (Sunnucks et al, 2006;Á lvarez-Presas et al, 2012) and even for other organisms (GoodallCopestake et al, 2012). Many populations are far from the neutral equilibrium, and not all populations deviate in the same direction (Table 1 and Supplementary Table S2).…”
Section: Phylogeography Of Land Planarians M á Lvarez-presas Et Almentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Comparable phylogeographic patterns among unrelated taxa within an ecological system are strong evidence of a shared spatiotemporal history (Bermingham and Moritz, 1998;Carstens et al, 2005;Sunnucks et al, 2006). At LDC, five unrelated stygobiontic taxa shared a divergent pattern of spatially associated genetic divergence.…”
Section: The Phylogeographic Patternmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Abiotic factors, such as bedrock composition, microsite humidity, mean annual precipitation, or type of forest cover, can result in variations of abundance and species composition in the soils at different scales, from microsite, site, local to regional levels (Melguizo‐Ruiz, Verdeny‐Vilalta, Arnedo, & Moya‐Laraño, 2012). On the other hand, taxa from soil communities can exhibit also the genetic imprint of ancient climatic and geographic events that may have been lost in other organisms with higher dispersal capacity (Pfenninger & Posada, 2002; Sunnucks et al., 2006). As a consequence, these groups of organisms allow the reconstruction of old events affecting the generation and maintenance of biodiversity and become excellent indicators of the conservation status of forest soils.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%