2020
DOI: 10.1111/fwb.13513
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Historical, human, and environmental drivers of genetic diversity in the red swamp crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) invading the Iberian Peninsula

Abstract: The human-mediated dispersal process seemed to have involved invasion hubs, hosting highly genetically diverse areas and acting as sources for subsequent introductions. Genetic diversity also tended to be higher in more suitable environments across the Iberian Peninsula. 6. Our results showed that the complex and human-mediated expansion of the red swamp crayfish in the Iberian Peninsula has involved several long-and short-distance movements and that both ecological and anthropogenic factors have shaped the ge… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Additionally, processes shaping extant molecular diversity of temperate marine species have predominantly been investigated in the Northern Hemisphere, where glaciation events and variation in ice sheets differ profoundly from Southern Hemisphere coastal systems (Velichko et al, 1997), many of which did not have ice cover at the height of the most recent glaciation. Lastly, drivers of molecular diversity are also usually investigated either visually with habitat suitability maps (Assis et al, 2014; Chefaoui et al, 2017; Neiva et al, 2014) or statistically with linear models (Acevedo‐Limón et al, 2020; De Kort et al, 2020; Manel et al, 2020), but rarely with both approaches. The prevailing processes driving intraspecific diversity can be inferred with more certainty when both visual and statistical analyses are combined (Yannic et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, processes shaping extant molecular diversity of temperate marine species have predominantly been investigated in the Northern Hemisphere, where glaciation events and variation in ice sheets differ profoundly from Southern Hemisphere coastal systems (Velichko et al, 1997), many of which did not have ice cover at the height of the most recent glaciation. Lastly, drivers of molecular diversity are also usually investigated either visually with habitat suitability maps (Assis et al, 2014; Chefaoui et al, 2017; Neiva et al, 2014) or statistically with linear models (Acevedo‐Limón et al, 2020; De Kort et al, 2020; Manel et al, 2020), but rarely with both approaches. The prevailing processes driving intraspecific diversity can be inferred with more certainty when both visual and statistical analyses are combined (Yannic et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, the red swamp crayfish firstly introduced in two specific sites in Spain for commercial purposes; however, it also had a rapid human‐mediated dispersal over the country (Acevedo‐Limón et al . 2020). With increasing evidence of the negative environmental impacts of invasive crayfish (Lodge et al .…”
Section: Socio‐economic Dimensionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This introduced population may have originated from a single introduction out of the native range, or from multiple introductions out of the native range, either from the same or different source populations. In contrast, the introduced range may comprise multiple invasive populations, which may originate from separate introduction events from one source population, or from different source populations out of the native range (Acevedo‐Limón et al, 2020; Oficialdegui et al, 2019). Finally, an established invasive population itself may become a source for subsequent invasions, a phenomenon coined the “bridgehead effect” (Bertelsmeier & Keller, 2018; Lombaert et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, the introduced range may comprise multiple invasive populations, which may originate from separate introduction events from one source population, or from different source populations out of the native range (Acevedo-Limón et al, 2020;Oficialdegui et al, 2019). Finally, an established invasive population itself may become a source for subsequent invasions, a phenomenon coined the "bridgehead effect" Lombaert et al, 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%