2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1472-4642.2012.00903.x
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Identifying zones of phenetic compression in West Mediterranean butterflies (Satyrinae): refugia, invasion and hybridization

Abstract: Aim  Distinct insular populations are generally considered important units for conservation. In island–mainland situations, unidirectional introgressive gene flow from the most abundant, typically continental, populations into the smaller island populations can erase native insular genetic units. As an indication of threat, the concept of phenetic slope is developed, a measure proportional to differentiation and to geographical proximity. Location  The Western Mediterranean, including the following islands: Sa… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…The fourth cluster recognised Sardinia and the Balearics as a unit, according to a well‐known and still largely unexplained similarity between these areas that may be explained by a refugium hypothesis (Dincă et al, ; Vodă et al, ; Figure d). The fifth cluster separated the Alps and Pyrenees from the Italian peninsula, with Corsica and circum‐Italian islands resembling more the Pyrenees‐Alps, reflecting a recurrent phylogeographic pattern found in several butterfly species (Dapporto et al, ; Figure e). The sixth cluster produced the expected division between the Alps and Pyrenees with Corsica, Elba and Giglio resembling more the Pyrenees than the spatially closer Alps (Dapporto et al, ; Figure f).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…The fourth cluster recognised Sardinia and the Balearics as a unit, according to a well‐known and still largely unexplained similarity between these areas that may be explained by a refugium hypothesis (Dincă et al, ; Vodă et al, ; Figure d). The fifth cluster separated the Alps and Pyrenees from the Italian peninsula, with Corsica and circum‐Italian islands resembling more the Pyrenees‐Alps, reflecting a recurrent phylogeographic pattern found in several butterfly species (Dapporto et al, ; Figure e). The sixth cluster produced the expected division between the Alps and Pyrenees with Corsica, Elba and Giglio resembling more the Pyrenees than the spatially closer Alps (Dapporto et al, ; Figure f).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…The first node separated Iberia (except for Catalonia), the Balearics and Sardinia from the other areas (Figure b). A solution with three clusters divided Sicily from the Pyrenees, Alps and Italian peninsula, according to a well‐known efficient barrier to dispersal represented by the narrow Messina strait (Dapporto, Bruschini, Dincă, Vila, & Dennis, ; Vodă, Dapporto, Dincă, & Vila, ; Figure c). The fourth cluster recognised Sardinia and the Balearics as a unit, according to a well‐known and still largely unexplained similarity between these areas that may be explained by a refugium hypothesis (Dincă et al, ; Vodă et al, ; Figure d).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such pattern was followed by expansion and marginal contacts with Z. polyxena during interglacial periods. The presence of a single haplotype endemic to Elba Island suggests that island colonization may have been hindered by sea level rise at the end of the last Ice Age, while genetic structure of mainland populations changed following complex and recurrent colonization events, as shown for other butterfly species from the same region [57], [58].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, winged females could have crossed that distance carried by strong wind. Similarly, Satyrinae butterflies probably entered the peninsula from south‐eastern Europe (Dapporto et al ., ). Three different haplotypes found within a small geographical area covering eastern Slovenia and Croatia (h19 and h23 from the Western clade, h24 from the Northern clade) suggest that another refugium could have been situated at the south‐eastern margin of the Alps.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%