2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0138433
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Pluvial Drainage Patterns and Holocene Desiccation Influenced the Genetic Architecture of Relict Dace, Relictus solitarius (Teleostei: Cyprinidae)

Abstract: Changing drainage patterns have played a significant role in the evolution of western North American aquatic taxa. Relict dace, Relictus solitarius, is a Great Basin endemic cyprinid with a native range that is restricted to four valleys in eastern Nevada. Relictus solitarius now occupies spring systems that are the remnants of Pleistocene-era pluvial lakes, although it may have occurred in the area for much longer. Here we use mitochondrial DNA sequence data to assess range-wide genetic diversity of R. solita… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…GSTS is located in the southern end of Goshute Valley between JSWC and Steptoe Valley, but our analyses do not indicate it is most closely related to either JSWC or Steptoe Valley Relict Dace (Figure 2e). Previously with mtDNA data, Houston et al (2015) found most fish from GSTS to have the same haplotype and the sampling location was monophyletic and nested within generally polyphyletic JSWC and Steptoe Valley sampling locations. The complex evolutionary history of GSTS including a loss of diversity due to drift and the rapid separation of Relict Dace into refugia results in few shared sites to inform branching patterns, and the few phylogenetically informative sites that do support a “true” topology may at times be less abundant than the sites that support a “false” topology.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
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“…GSTS is located in the southern end of Goshute Valley between JSWC and Steptoe Valley, but our analyses do not indicate it is most closely related to either JSWC or Steptoe Valley Relict Dace (Figure 2e). Previously with mtDNA data, Houston et al (2015) found most fish from GSTS to have the same haplotype and the sampling location was monophyletic and nested within generally polyphyletic JSWC and Steptoe Valley sampling locations. The complex evolutionary history of GSTS including a loss of diversity due to drift and the rapid separation of Relict Dace into refugia results in few shared sites to inform branching patterns, and the few phylogenetically informative sites that do support a “true” topology may at times be less abundant than the sites that support a “false” topology.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Nevada Department of Wildlife (NDOW) biologists collected fin clips from 396 morphologically identified Relict Dace in the Butte, Ruby, Goshute, Steptoe, and Spring Valleys in 2017 (Table 1; Figure 1). Locations used in Houston et al (2015) are noted, as well as alternative names for locations. Fin clips were dried and stored in envelopes until DNA extraction using the Qiagen DNeasy kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's protocol.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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